35 Burst results for "Ewing"

A highlight from RadCast Rewind: Episode with Fishing Legend Al Linder, Now on Carbon TV

RADCast Outdoors

12:11 min | 3 weeks ago

A highlight from RadCast Rewind: Episode with Fishing Legend Al Linder, Now on Carbon TV

"Hey, Radcast is on. And welcome to the show, Mr. Jim Zumbo. Gentlemen, I am pleased to be here and I use that term loosely when I say gentlemen. Al Winder. Just want to welcome you to the show. Thanks for taking time out of your busy schedule to hang out with us on a podcast for a little bit. I am looking forward to it. There's nothing makes me happier than a coke in Minnesota. If I can't be out fishing, I should be talking about fishing. Hayling from Wisconsin, Janna Waller. Thank you so much for having me. It's Radcast. Hunting, fishing, and everything in between. Powered by Bowspider. Brought to you by PK Lures and High Mountain Seasonings. And now, here's your hosts, Patrick Edwards and David Merrill. Again, Al, it's great to have you on the program. I do want to give a quick shout out to Danny Kertola, my cousin, for helping set this up with Al. That was a big deal. Thanks, Danny. Yeah, so I really appreciate Danny and Al. Just want to welcome you to the show. Al, thanks for taking time out of your busy schedule to hang out with us on a podcast for a little bit. I am looking forward to it. Nothing makes me happier than a coke in Minnesota. If I can't be out fishing, I should be talking about fishing. It's going to be well below zero tonight. So Al, that's probably one of the big motivations for Patrick and I to start this podcast is we both have young families and we're both avidly into the outdoors, whether it's fishing, hunting, or a little bit of both. So that's our goal is to recruit new anglers and new hunters to the outdoors. The timing is really appropriate for it. We've got a whole new recruitment coming in because of COVID that our sport has never seen before, experience in the outdoors. And they need some guidance in a lot of cases to respect the resource. And that's an important part of what's happening now with these whole lot of these newbies coming in. Yeah, it's been fun to watch you over the years because you've really helped teach everybody about that. And I know as a kid, I always looked forward to outdoor life coming in the mail and also in Fisherman Magazine, because that was the thing was I wanted to learn more about fishing and growing up in Cheyenne, Wyoming, it was like a dead zone of fishing. There's really not much close unless you're going to drive two hours to Glendo, three and a half hours to Seminole, five hours to Boyson, you just forget about it. There's just nothing there. You talk about teaching people. I was reading that as much as I could, because I knew when I went, I had to really capitalize on those trips. And you've done an amazing job about that. And I just wanted to know if you could just share some tips with us, what's some key strategies of getting kids and just other anglers out on the water? What are some good strategies and tips? Number one, make sure you take them when you can get them back. I can't hold eyes how important that is, especially with the younger ones that have shorter tension spans. And it is critical that barber is going down or something pulling on the end of that line. And that's one. And even with new adults, and we have a lot of those coming into the sport now that have never fished before. And yes, they have patience where the young people don't, however, their patience will reign after one or two trips without getting a bite. It's the biggest hindrance that I've seen to our sport and your people back. The key is getting a bite to light that fire. They got to catch something. And you don't want to take them out in miserable weather conditions. You have to weather good and do everything in your power to make sure that they get back. And the reason people fish and continue to fish is they had a good experience and a good experience is something pulling on the end of their line. That's really the reason you're out there. That's what motivates people. It's the miracle of a fish. It is amazing to me, my entire life in this business to see what a fish can do to change somebody's life. Yeah, a kid sitting on the dock catching bluegills and all of a sudden nowhere, a two pound bass runs out from under the dock and grabs your bait. You never had your catching your six and having a ball and out of this bass is there. Your hook did break where you landed your life forever. Somebody has never met fish. Yeah, they heard something about it. They're going out with somebody that knows something about all of a sudden next to the boat. This monster opens his mouth and bites on it. It's an image that burns into your spirit that will change. It never goes away. That's what lights the fire in this sport. And it's why it's so important that the end of good weather to do it. And that's the key is to get them action. And then if they're really young, you know, after two, three hours, they like to think around and alive. You get a few fish around all kids like that. They're fascinated with fish bouncing around in the life. And that's the key. It really is the key to keep them motivated, keep them fishing action in a short period of time. But again, with the adult or even a young person after after. So you get them out for two trips the third time. Yeah, you're going to say you want to go fishing with me today. You got too bad experience that they're going to go back and play video games. So the interest won't be there. Well, I was fortunate enough to grow up near Saltwater and my dad in the Pacific Northwest. We did a lot of salmon and halibut and deep sea. And I got introduced very young to fishing. We actually just had a podcast with my dad on talking about starting that fire that you're talking about. I'm curious, who was the fishing mentor in your life? The person that got you hooked on fishing? Well, actually, my brother's 10 years my senior. And he took me everywhere from the time I was a little kid. He's seeing a burning passion. He shared that he said there was something about it from the time you were little. You were obsessed with fish and fishing. And he nurtured that. He actually nurtured that in him being 10 years older than I am. Yeah, he took me under his wing. And I had some really good experiences in those years. One of them that really fed my passion for fishing was my mother. And this is strange, but I got to share that story with you. My brother obviously loved the fish. So he took me everywhere we could go. We fished all over the ponds and lakes and creeks and rivers in between Chicago and Milwaukee. And there's many of them. And we were out every moment we could go. He'd be able to go the way he took me. But my mother really liked to fish. And she's seen people would ask me at a young age, wouldn't you go to a Christmas gathering of family or friends like this? And yeah, what are you going to do when you grow up? Boldly coming? I'm going to be living fishing. That's what I'm going to do. I'm going to look at you. Oh, OK. You're going to blow it off. And my mother, she, under the guy, my brother, would she at Christmas time or birthdays or special event every time I found my Christmas presents and gifts were the latest, greatest fishing tackle in the industry, whether it was a rod, a reel, a lure, magazines, books, anything that she fed that fed it and fed it. Never said that's a dumb thing. How are you going to make a living in a fishing industry? Especially at that time, that many years ago. Yeah. And the only thing you get, you tackle manufacturers and outdoor writers that at that time, one of the inspiring outdoor writers to me as a kid was Jason Lucas. He wrote for Sports of Field at that time. And he wrote a book called Lucas on Bass. And I'll bet you I read it a dozen times. It marked every page, the experiences burned into my mind. But experiences like that, and then television, I remember pioneers of the TV fishing business, the first one, his name was Gattabot Gattis, the Flying Fisherman. He was the first one that syndicated television fishing shows. And he'd fly to different locations all over the country and share his fishing experience, Gattabot Gattis. And then that led to Virgil Ward, that was the true championship fishing. And he was the one that lit by fire to get into the fishing industry and do a television show in the business. He was here in my hometown in Brainerd, Minnesota, when we were starting Lindy Jackal Company. And his producer, his name was Jayden, he gave us a call at the office one day and he says, Hi, I'm Dave Jayden, I'm with Virgil Ward, championship fishing. We've been in the area for three days. We're having, we want to do well, I should have went to Bass Busters gig. And he says, can you help? And I understand with the way you're a really good fisherman, everybody says, go call Al if you want one. So should we do a show? That's absolutely. We went out, we got a phenomenal show shot in four hours, he got everything done. He's all happy. He took off, went back to Missouri, and we finished that. My brother looks at me that night, we're talking. He says, that's great. He does a television show and talks about the lures that he manufactures. I said, we could do that. We got, why don't we start a television fishing show and help with that's what led our fire. And that was it. That trip went there and we bought a camera. I mean, that's what camera and my brother learned how to use it and how to voice tape together. And you're shooting with film at that time. You had to rewind these stories on how you get into the game and into the fishing industry and into the sport and the different aspects that are available. You get these different stories from everybody that is enough to make a living business. But I'll go back to what I said just a little bit. Just what a fish could do to change somebody's life. It's astounding to me how it happens all the time. One experience with a fish and just bam, your life is changed by it. Yeah, I agree. It's an amazing experience. I remember catching fish when I was little and how it lit my fire. And again, I promised that I would do this on the podcast and I hope it's not lost because you hear this stuff a lot. But my friend Seth Ewing, who lives in northern Idaho and myself, we grew up just eating up your shows and the magazine. And it really did benefit both of us. He's an incredible fly fisherman and he learned a lot from your fly fishing video that you guys put out with Dahlberg. And I love the smallmouth and the walleye and those kind of species. And so it's just one of those things where I hope it's not lost on you when you hear us say thank you so much for doing all of that because it really did inspire a lot of people across the United States and the world to go out and fish and to take other people fishing, which I think is really cool. One of the things that I always enjoyed and my dad and I always enjoyed watching you fish was just the joy on your face. You were always chuckling and laughing and having a great time. We were just living vicariously through you as the wind blew about 70 miles an hour through Cheyenne, but it's just, it really did make a big difference. And I do want to, I want to ask about this because this is really important to David and I, we both have little kids and we take them out fishing, hunting different activities and you have kids of your own. And I know like he's very influential and big into the fishing business as well. But can you talk a little bit about what that was like raising your kids to be fishermen, but also raising them during that time that you're just so busy and you got all these things going on with the fishing world and the fame that you had going on. How did you manage all those things and still make it a great experience for your kids? They grew up in the business they did. There's not all seven, Ron had seven children. I've got two boys, all of the kids, even the girls, three of his kids are girls. They all served in the business doing something. Yeah. From the time we started Lindy Tackle Company, they were pouring sinkers and learning how to tie snails, raffle them on cars. They were exposed to the business as a family run business all their life when they grew up in different fields and did other things. But a number of them stayed in the business and are in the business today, like Jimmy and Banny and Billy and my son Troy.

David Jason Lucas Janna Waller Danny Danny Kertola Seth Ewing Patrick Jim Zumbo David Merrill RON Patrick Edwards Jayden Two Hours Three Lindy Tackle Company Minnesota Chicago Al Winder Milwaukee Missouri
Monitor Show 12:00 09-27-2023 12:00

Bloomberg Radio New York - Recording Feed

01:55 min | 2 months ago

Monitor Show 12:00 09-27-2023 12:00

"With Bloomberg, you get the story behind the story, the story behind the global birth rate, behind your EV battery's environmental impact, behind sand, yeah, sand, you get context. And context changes everything. Go to Bloomberg .com to get context. CEDO and it looks nice. It's on nine acres and she would have cool neighbors like Oprah Winfrey and Brad Pitt. Yeah, she's pretty cool too. Yeah. So is Orlando Bloom. I guess. I prefer John Mayer. This is Bloomberg. Broadcasting 24 hours a day at Bloomberg .com and the Bloomberg Business Act. This is Bloomberg Radio. This is Bloomberg Markets with Paul Sweeney and Matt Miller. We got a lot of green on the screen here, but the volume is light. We constantly underestimate the strength of the U .S. consumer. This is a market that's much more optimistic or bullish than maybe central bankers are. Breaking market news and insight from Bloomberg experts. There's still some concern out there in the market that there is room for things to deteriorate a little bit more than what they're indicating. As small and medium -sized businesses struggle, they don't present as much competition. The supply chain has still got dislocations globally and here in the U .S. This is Bloomberg Markets with Paul Sweeney and Matt Miller on Bloomberg Radio. All right. Coming up in this hour, we're going to do a deep dive on the bond market. Who better to do that with than Jerry Cudzel. He's a General's Portfolio Manager at TCW. That's Trust Company of the West folks. They have a lot of assets under management. Then we're going to check in with Brett Ewing, Chief Market Strategist at First Franklin Financial. Get his thoughts on this marketplace. Is there a constructive call on this market right now? Then Eileen Mullaney. She's Workforce Transformation Lead at Vialtro Partners. Discussing this whole back -to -work hybrid. Where are we in that whole...

Eileen Mullaney Matt Miller Brad Pitt Jerry Cudzel Brett Ewing John Mayer Paul Sweeney Orlando Bloom TCW Oprah Winfrey Nine Acres First Franklin Financial Bloomberg Business Act Vialtro Partners U .S. Bloomberg 24 Hours A Day Bloomberg Radio Bloomberg Markets Bloomberg .Com
"ewing" Discussed on RADCast Outdoors

RADCast Outdoors

04:03 min | 4 months ago

"ewing" Discussed on RADCast Outdoors

"This episode of RadCast Outdoors is brought to you by PK Lures, Bow Spider, and High Mountain Seasonings. Fish on! Hey, RadCast is on! Hunting, fishing, and everything in between. This is RadCast outdoor. Here are David Merrill and Patrick Edwards. Well, hello and welcome to another episode of RadCast Outdoors. I'm Patrick Edwards and I'm excited today because we get to talk with Seth Ewing. Once again, if you don't remember Seth, you can go back a little ways. We've done several episodes together, including Hank Shaw, Swiss Alps hikes, mountain goat hunting, all kinds of things. So go back and check out Seth. You can find him on our website and you can find him in our list. Just search his name. But Seth, welcome to the show. Yeah, glad to be here with you again. It's fun. It's always good to have you on. I think it's fun to talk about fly fishing with you because I don't really care for fly fishing all that much and most people know that. But it is something that is a big time sport. There are a lot of people who use that activity throughout the summer, even the fall and spring. And there's a few hardcore people who do it in the winter. But by and large, this is the time of year, right? This is the time to get out that stick, whip it around and go catch a fish. Yeah. I mean, it's certainly a good time. When I was living in Salt Lake City, my favorite time of the year to go fly fishing actually was the winter. Precisely because I don't like a crowd and the ice on the bank kept the riffraff at home. Super Bowl Sunday was the best day on the river, period. I had the Provo all to myself practically. So definitely the equipment needs are different. This is probably the easiest time of year to get started without having to break the bank, for sure. And it's nice to be able to.

"ewing" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

01:35 min | 9 months ago

"ewing" Discussed on WTOP

"Some huge saves. Maybe I'll just add a few times. But I also thought we had some good chances, and they blocked a lot of shots and got in the way a few times, so I like you said, obviously, it would have been nice to get two points, but take the one point and move on, get to New York games coming up, and then back to back. So there's still points to be had. In a wild day for local college basketball, Maryland beat Minnesota 70 54 despite a rough first half shooting. The term scored 19 points off 15 Minnesota turnovers and now advanced to face Indiana for a second 9 p.m. tip off in his many nights. Georgetown announced Patrick Ewing is out after 6 seasons in which his final two campaigns were historically bad winning only 13 total games and setting a big east record with a 29 game conference losing skid like Ewing, Mike Brennan coached American to only one NCAA tournament appearance and was fired after ten seasons. The NFL awarded Washington one of only two third round level compensatory draft picks based on free agency, getting the 97th overall selection due to the loss of Brandon sheriff last year, the commander is also getting additional 6th rounder, the ravens, meanwhile, they don't have any compensatory picks for the first time in 13 years. Rob woodfork WTO sports. All right, thanks, rob. Let's get you in the back half of this midnight hour on WTO, including this. Virginia makes its pitch for the new FBI headquarters to be in Springfield in downtown D.C., I'm John doman. Battle lines are being drawn up in Congress over healthcare benefits, taxes, and a lot more. On Capitol Hill, I'm Mitchell Miller. Russia surprises Ukraine. 6 hypersonic missiles. I'm JJ green. At 1227, traffic and weather and update a minute away. When you ask people here

Minnesota Mike Brennan Patrick Ewing Brandon sheriff Georgetown Maryland Rob woodfork Ewing basketball Indiana New York NCAA NFL John doman ravens Washington WTO rob Mitchell Miller FBI
"ewing" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

02:24 min | 9 months ago

"ewing" Discussed on WTOP

"Not unexpected. Georgetown just announced Patrick Ewing is out as head coach of the hoyas after 6 seasons in which his Alma mater went just 75 in 109 after last night's one and done in the biggies tournament after which he said. Hey look, I listened to coach behar's press conference after the game and everybody was just ranting about are you coming back or what? Hey look, I am proud of being a Georgetown Hoya. This institution has been great to me over the years. The honor to come back as the coach here. Yeah, but he will not be and this will go down as one of the great disappointments in all of sports. I mean, Ewing was undoubtedly the school's greatest player. He went 121 and 23 as the face of its loan national championship in 1984, but as a coach, he presided over a big east record 29 game conference losing skid they won only 13 games over these two last two seasons. Headlining tonight's college action, Maryland taking on Minnesota and round two of the Big Ten tournament. That's a 9 o'clock tip off, 13th ranked Virginia faces North Carolina at the top of the hour in the ACC quarterfinals and same start time for the capitals they host the Devils rather in their first action since a two and two road trip. Rob, wood fork WTO sports. Up ahead after traffic and weather, President Biden unveils a budget plan that he says would reduce the deficit by $3 trillion over a decade, it's 6 26. Meet the new Congress. This profile brought to you by the American bankers association. Hi folks, Hillary Scotland here. The democratic congresswoman is the first woman to be elected from western Michigan's third district. A record 150 women are now represented in the House and Senate. A mother of two says more needs to be done to address the issue of children working in dangerous jobs. These children, some as young as 12 are working marathon shifts often with dangerous machinery. Before coming to Congress, Colton was an attorney and often worked on immigration issues. I Mitchell Miller. I'm rob Nichols, president and CEO of the American bankers association. The 118th Congress is open for business with more than 80 new members. The freshman class includes veterans, former hill staffers, and the first Gen Z member of Congress. Each bringing their own experiences and skills. America's banks and their 2 million employees look forward to working with the new Congress to grow the economy and give everyone the chance to succeed. Learn more at ABA

Georgetown Hoya Patrick Ewing hoyas behar President Biden Georgetown Hillary Scotland Ewing Congress ABA ACC Devils WTO Maryland Minnesota North Carolina western Michigan Virginia Mitchell Miller
"ewing" Discussed on Expositors Collective

Expositors Collective

04:00 min | 1 year ago

"ewing" Discussed on Expositors Collective

"Bye. All right. Well, that was great, wasn't it? Thank you so much to Amy and thanks to you for listening all the way to the end. So you certainly know this by now, but Amy is speaking at the CG N international conference and Costa Mesa, California. June 26th, 27th, 28th and 29th is the dates in the calendar for you to commit to coming along and hearing from Amy and ray orland and Dominic zone and Nick cady and Brian rogerson and so many more. We got a great lineup of main session speakers, and then also, as you heard, we've got some real B list celebrities for the workshops. So I hope to see you there for my workshop on sermon preparation and delivery. All right, make sure that you're subscribed to this show because next Tuesday with great interview with doctor uche and Azor. Speaking about apathy, apathy and the life of the preacher and also combating apathy in the life of the congregation. I'm going to leave you with a preview clip for next episode, but make sure that on Spotify, make sure that on YouTube or Apple podcasts, wherever you listen to this show. Make sure that you are subscribed so that next Tuesday and every Tuesday, you have fresh deliveries to help you grow in your personal study and public proclamation of God's word. Here's a preview for next week's episode with doctor uche Azor. Did you have a brief word for the preacher who's maybe apathetic? Yeah, I think the preacher is on one level. Just another sheep in the same way that I know preachers tend to tend to see themselves as we are we are the shepherds over sheep, but preachers are sheep. And so there's a sense in which the very same things that there's need to sort of break out of their apathy. We need. But there are certain things that I think preachers are more prone to. So I think preachers, if they're honest, they can be more prone to the compassion fatigue that we mentioned earlier and the sort of apathy through basically constant constantly saying the same kinds of things. And kind of getting cold and numb to staying the same old kinds of things. And so preachers have to be extra vigilant to try to keep them themselves in relationship with actual people that they're able to own their indifference to. And it's embarrassing for a preacher or for me as a psychology teacher to ever own that I don't care as much about the things that I'm actually coming out of my mouth right now. I can pretend like I am, but I need a safe place to be able to say to someone, I don't. Or I'm struggling with doubt, and I'm really dealing with doubt and I need someone to walk with me and pray with me and help me to process my doubt. I think preachers because pastors because they tend to be isolated so much from relationships or relationships that feel like equal relationships. I think we have to we have the press into those because that's the place where we can actually lay bare before someone. Here's what's actually going on. Here are the causes of my indifference. Can you walk with me and pray with me and work with me and hold me really actually accountable in these areas so that I don't stay in this place of indifference and apathy?.

Amy ray orland Dominic zone Nick cady Brian rogerson uche Azor uche Azor Costa Mesa California YouTube Apple
"ewing" Discussed on Expositors Collective

Expositors Collective

08:24 min | 1 year ago

"ewing" Discussed on Expositors Collective

"Our guests for this week, doctor Amy or Ewing. Now, doctor or Ewing is an author, a theologian, a speaker, an apologist, a persuader, and an evangelist. And in this conversation, we speak about the role of persuasion and even the use of apologetics to overcome people's objections to the good news of the gospel of Jesus Christ. We speak about ways to make the message of the Bible species seen as contemporary, valuable and beautiful, rather than antiquated, untrue or irrelevant to every day life. I was excited to speak to her over Zoom for this episode, and I also am really looking forward to being able to sit and learn from her face to face at the upcoming cabri chapel CG international conference, which is taking place June 26th to the 29th in Costa Mesa, California. At the historic coverage chapel Costa Mesa church. The theme of this year's conference is gospel culture. A colony of heaven in a country of death. And the speakers this year include obviously doctor Amy or Ewing, previous guests on this show, ray orland, Dominic Don, as well as Tim Chadwick, who was on the show just recently, Nick cady, as well as Doug solder, Pancho Juarez, and Tony Clark, who haven't been on this show yet. I really want to invite you to consider coming along. If you're part of the cavalry chapel network of churches, then of course, I certainly hope to see you there. But also this is open to anyone or everyone involved in gospel ministry. And so I invite you. There'll be a link in the show notes for this registration, but you can go to conference coverage apple dot com to find out more information and hopefully I'll see you in Costa Mesa, California at the end of June. All right, I'm gonna get out of your way and here is this interview with doctor Amy or Ewing. All right, hi. Welcome to the expositors collective podcast. I'm thrilled to be speaking with doctor Amy or Ewing. Good morning. And welcome to the show. Hi, good morning, right, great to see you. Yeah, well, likewise, you just got your cup of coffee, so we are ready for a chat. The first question that we first question that we always ask, and I think it's a great way to get to know you a little bit and your story is Amy, would you mind telling us about the first time that you ever talked about the Bible or talked about Jesus in a public setting? Wow, well, I think the most memorable one that there may have been smaller opportunities before this was I was 15 and I was part of a youth with a mission team that had gone into the Czech Republic. It was the year after the Berlin Wall came down. So we're talking post communist country just emerging into freedom, lots of people interested and open. And so we were a group of young people. We were doing kind of performing arts. So dance in songs and stuff and then like proclamation of the word in public spaces. And generally, you know, obviously it would be one of the leaders that kind of spoke. But on this one occasion we were in wenceslas square in Prague, which is many of you have been there. I have found maybe to fall and it was in the summer and they were just crowds and crowds of people are probably over a thousand people stopped to watch and to listen. And one of the leaders just said to me, Amy, I think you are meant to sort of give the word. And I thought, sorry, what? Okay. Right. Okay. Absolutely heart racing. And I think I just spoke from John 360 about the love of God shown in the world in Jesus and probably wasn't very good at all, but God was very gracious and there was a really amazing response to the gospels. We kind of then went out into the crowds in twos and led people to Jesus. And that experience spoke volumes to me of the why when leadership to give a young person a chance, you know, having actually given us lots of training and encouragement along the way, not really preaching trainings per se, but sort of spotting, I guess, potential. And obviously for years of women, that was quite hard to come by, but that you would be given that kind of opportunity. So with great fear and trembling, it was a memorable day. Wild. And how long was it between the time that you were like, tapped and asked to talk to the actual talk? Like a moment, 20 minutes. Really? Wow. Wow. And then were you scribbly notes or were you brain? I mean, I know it was a long time ago, but yeah, I was also in some of the dances and songs. So you had your Bible there, and I did have, I did have some notes. And I actually had, I had a little thing prepared because we all had to have a kind of testimony prepared. We need to have something prepared to say. I just wasn't expecting to say it for thousand people. With that kind of situation. Yeah. So get that notebook out. With several miracles are there. But I think also too. I've been involved in this kind of youth drama pantomime things. And the fact that it drew a crowd at all because those things were quite, but they had their moments. And maybe they even still work in some context, but to draw a crowd is a rare, wonderful. Having said that too, for people that were on that team have since went on to become pop stars. So the standard of singing and music was pretty good. All right, wow. All right. Not by me. I was very much in the back, but I never did actual singing. It was just kind of like the pantomime the king of hearts and this and that. Anyway, that's another thing. So your first time ever, yeah, talking in public or at least at least the thing was like an invitational you were inviting people to believe maybe even a degree of persuading people to place their trust in Christ. And since then, I know that your reputation, career, or ministry, has been one of apologetics or invitation or persuasion. Would you mind giving us maybe the quick what's happened between 15 and today, what's gotten you into, I guess, this vocation of evangelist. Thank you. So obviously I'm based here in Britain. You can probably tell from my accent. I think you said that earlier, but that meant and has meant as a young person who's a follower of Jesus that you're not really in a Christian culture, you are sharing the gospel with your friends at school, you're kind of inviting them to things to come and know Jesus, but it's very much a hostile situation or apathy. Those are the two things you're really focused dealing with. And so for me, that was my story. There was a very small group of us who were Christians at school. Not a big youth group in church or anything. So you're kind of learning what it means to persuade as you go along because you work out what doesn't work, what is unpersuasive. I went to Oxford to study theology.

Ewing Amy cabri chapel Costa Mesa church Costa Mesa ray orland Dominic Don Tim Chadwick Nick cady Doug solder Pancho Juarez Tony Clark California wenceslas square Berlin Wall Czech Republic Prague apple John Britain
"ewing" Discussed on RADCast Outdoors

RADCast Outdoors

08:13 min | 2 years ago

"ewing" Discussed on RADCast Outdoors

"Welcome to another episode of rag cast outdoors. I'm patrick edwards. Time david maryland. We're in the great indoors today. Talking about the great outdoors you. You caught me in a rare moment of home. David's been up in the mountains is some of you all know how they go. Brutal brutal is a tough year. Lots of grizzly bears The moon was full all night. And then we've got some snow and just cramp down but we were in elk every day so it was. It was everything i wanted just to it was. It was very taxing and daunting elk. But we're home now and we have meet the freezer so no complaints. Yeah you can't complain when you have meet meet is a good thing and so today. We've got a special guest in the studio friend of mine for thirty two years. Seth ewing welcome to the show. So it's exciting. To be here came all the way fourteen hour. Drive from idaho to come and talk to us In hang out with me and kept lots of fish which we did over the past few days. Let's be honest. Mostly that yeah. We were some fish and so it was a lot of fun. But yeah and i've been friends since we were five years old. And seth is much more of the hiker adventurer guy than me and so i thought it would be fun to have him. Come on and talk about one of the coolest trips. He's ever done probably the most brutal trip he's ever done. Yeah i tried to. I tried to pass it up this last summer as far as the brutal that goes but it was very special for sure absolutely and so just just to kind of get to know your seth Tell everybody you know where you're from and just a little bit about how you got into hiking. Yeah so Grew up in southern southeastern wyoming and north central montana and my my dad was a texas transplant so grew up in the city really really longed to be in the mountains and it was hard to keep him out of the mountains really as a young when he was young man so when he had kids i think he started taking me fishing with him while i was still in diapers. He's got stories of me. Like eating rob brook trout. Neither hand woman in diapers So it's kind of the blood so to speak at that point. But he also he loves getting into new new ground so started me and my brothers and other other young boys especially back into the mountains and backpacking. When i was really quite young. So something that. I've always done and yet never stopped doing really. So that's kind of how. I got my my intro into it and the other thing really was there whose dad will always go off with his friends at he'd leave us all behind and he brings back like a rock and tell us these stories about going up into the wind river range and with his buddies and catching trout and fallen off logs into the ice water and nearly freezing to death and stuff. So those part of like this. When you're a man this is what you do. Go off in the mountains and you you nearly die and i feel a little kindred spirit to your dad you know being raised as a city boy and once. I got my taste of the mountains. I haven't laughed right i. I grew up in oregon. We've talked about that. But moved moved to alaska and then moved to wyoming. And i pick up rocks to this day in from like my trips to the brooks range and bring them back my son and be like here. Here's a special rock from the brooks returned and we look at a map of where that was at. And it's an. I'm always when you're talking about expanding in territory. I liked to learn this drainage and then mike always wondering hey what and it doesn't matter if you're fishing or hiking hunting it's always well. What's over the next rain. What's over the next toners. Always that that draw or that poll to say. Hey this is look and see. What's over there. i sometimes. it's a hellacious horrible. We're never doing that again. Other times you find hidden little lakes or streams that are just loaded with with goodness right. Yeah absolutely it was funny. I got no i move to utah Some years back. And i finally made it to the wind. River range felt like Never been but. I made sure i got my dad iraq and send it to him in the mail so as a little one here you go dad a little. Have a rock. Yeah exactly well you know. It's been fun just watching you over the years. You've always been the guy who goes up into the wilderness and backpacks and you've got that adventurous. Spirit and i remember back in twenty ten when you plan this huge trip and i i told you you were crazy and you are. But that's the point but but usually patrick most of the trips that you know i think of the ones i've done. The ones that are memorable involve a lot of suffering right and some degree of extremity. Where you you might die. That's the ones you're like. Hey let's do that again. So we were talking about patrick mcmanus and some of those stories. Go ahead and relay that from earlier today. Yeah so i. I'm a big fan of patrick mcmanus and know the pat is to you and so i asked him. Do you remember near member at the the story the big trip and you no. I don't remember that one so got a hold of it online and made sure that got a chance to read it. But it's the whole concept. Is that when pat was well. Patrick management different pat. When he was a kid he would like escape with this fantasy of doing the big trip and part of the big trip was that it would need to be really hard and so a big part of the story. Is that you you want to make sure that your hardships happen. Because if it's an easy trip than the that's not the big trip you half. If everything went correctly that you have to suffer greatly for it to be so. It's this whole story about this. I'm sure and crabtree. With red. Sweeney story for those of you heard familiar for those of you for those of you. Who aren't you need to pick up a fine and pleasant misery and read some. There's there's like twelve. Other patrick mcmanus. Who he is all three of us. Here he'd fans so if you didn't grow up reading him in outdoor life missed out as a child a finding pleasant miseries a good place to start though because that's a little bit and related to what we're talking about for sure just even that book title. It's like this guy. Gets it fine in pleasant misery. Talk about misery it. It definitely makes things more memorable. But you were telling me about this trip and you were. You know very ambitious in my opinion saying you were to go. Couple hundred miles in swiss alps you've ended up doing about two hundred and forty in the course of sixteen nineteen days three of those days. You didn't heightened but just for the listener. Put that in perspective do the math. That's that's quite a bit every day and So seth i want you to tell just you know. Why did you even think of doing something like that. What what was your motivation. Yeah well it was really a combination of a couple of different things. One that was not insignificant. As i had a couple of friends who had gone and they showed me pictures and i thought i have to see that. I have to go and see that those are you know. I grew up in the mountains and loving the mountain so museum mountains like that is i have to actually get there and see that because if that's what the picture looks like i've got to see that in person so that was the genesis of it but i was graduating from college. My parents said well you can either have some money or will buy. Who plane tickets this switzerland. So you can do this hike okay. Well what do i wanna see. Do i wanna see like the matterhorn. Or or these. This part of the bernese alps. Or what did i just decided. I wanna see as much of it as i possibly can in a in a three week period. If i'm gone for three weeks how much of it can. I see and i settled on that route because i was going to see the place that i had most been interested in seeing and i would kind of do a diagonal if you rethink about switzerland. It's coming to the shape of a kidney bean. And i just cut across the long access to being from the. What is that kind of the central eastern border all the way all the way to lake geneva and so i thought that's the best way to see it probably going to get to go once. So.

patrick mcmanus patrick edwards david maryland Seth ewing rob brook wyoming seth north central idaho River range montana David pat brooks texas alaska oregon utah mike iraq
"ewing" Discussed on Esports Network Podcast

Esports Network Podcast

01:30 min | 2 years ago

"ewing" Discussed on Esports Network Podcast

"Com, just remember Better Call Saul. And you can also find the lawyers with game video cast on YouTube under the solu arnstein and YouTube page. There's a curated selection of the lawyers with game, videocasts there. You can also find it on our website. And I think that's I think that's pretty much everything from my perspective. So it's been really great talking to you Kevin. This is stuff I love to talk about. I know you do too. So I might need to go get on my PlayStation 5 right about now. Enjoy why you got it's Friday, time to kind of enjoy ourselves at the time of this recording, of course. But I'll leave the links to all that in the podcast description below and we'll make sure we'll tag dairy some stuff, of course, once we post it on socials. And fairly sports though, man, I don't know. Cowboys just beat the eagles, man. I don't know how you feel about that right now. Any quick thoughts? We're not talking about that right now, but we'll make a comeback. I think we're playing Dallas again in late December. So we'll see what happens. Oh yeah, Jackson throw for like 400 yards and then 6 touch dental C, right? Thank you for coming on the show, and I appreciate taking the time. Absolutely. He's Darius Gambino, IP attorney with sol Ewing, and I'm Kevin career right here on the eSports network podcast. Brand new thing..

YouTube Saul Kevin Cowboys eagles Dallas Darius Gambino Jackson sol Ewing
"ewing" Discussed on Esports Network Podcast

Esports Network Podcast

04:18 min | 2 years ago

"ewing" Discussed on Esports Network Podcast

"I have it on the background and while I'm working I listen to it. It's pretty it's like this show. It's 45 ish minutes to 20 minutes or so or 25 to 40 minutes or so, and it's just interesting talk to interesting people. And we're learning all kinds of things. So I mean, this is kind of a subjective question, but what was the most surprising thing that you've learned throughout this video series, the most surprising? I don't know. I don't know that I was surprised about anything that I learned. Probably the most surprising thing was that, like you said, the bosses went for it. You know, because, you know, law firms by law firms by their nature are very conservative. Just give you an example. My old law firm really didn't want to get into the cannabis space because of concerns of what that would mean. And Saul Ewing is very active in that space as are a lot of other firms. But you know, I think firms in general don't want to portray an image to anyone that they're anything less than serious. And I think when you come on and you have a series about video games and you talk about playing video games, is there some people that might say, well, those aren't serious lawyers. But you know, I look at it completely differently at coming from the world that I came from. And I think everyone in our practice group looks at it that way too. We're serious lawyers that on our downtime play video games. And I think it's extremely important that we do that to represent our clients to the best that we can. I mean, it's a cutting edge from you joined here because I don't think I've ever heard somebody refer to themselves as a serious lawyer, working in the eSports industry space, you know? And then, of course, the work is serious, but you know, there's also times you kind of have to lay back a little bit and enjoy the gaming you have in front of you. So if you ever need a guess, let me know. I'm more than happy to hop on. I've never been excited in an invitation in the middle of an interview before. So I think I'm blushing a little bit on this side of the camera. And if you can see that, but we'll definitely set something up, Kevin. We'd love to have you on. For sure. I'd love to say yes. So let's do it. But let's talk about the sea squirts and games face a little bit more. When you first heard that competitive gaming and eSports companies were emerging and it was kind of becoming this newfangled media market with tons of opportunities for intellectual property and trademark and copyright and all that good stuff there. What was your first reaction? Was it one of kind of like you kind of like being a little skeptic or was it one like you're more curious? I figured you're more curious than anything about the emerging space, right? Absolutely. I was curious about it, and I was excited about it. The thing that I think I first had skepticism about was when colleges and universities started having scholarship programs for eSports athletes, but I'm so thrilled that that has really taken off. And just as an aside at my firm, we represent a lot of colleges and universities and as part of our eSports group, we've worked with a lot of them on different issues about setting up tournaments and having programs, varsity programs, things like that. But I'd say that was the first thing I said, well, I can understand having a scholarship for an NCA basketball player, but for eSports players..

Saul Ewing Kevin basketball
"ewing" Discussed on Esports Network Podcast

Esports Network Podcast

03:28 min | 2 years ago

"ewing" Discussed on Esports Network Podcast

"What kind of interest surrounded the launch of a video series about gaming and eSports and what led you to kind of hosted? I mean, I'm sure you brought it up to your bosses over at saw you and you're like, hey, there's interest here. We should really bring on some guests and talk about this. But what kind of support did you see kind of building this up and hosting it? You only launched what a few months ago. So you're still kind of in the weeds, if you will, but it's pretty good from what I've seen so far. Thank you, I appreciate that. Yeah, we've been we only launched in the summer of this year, but we've been working on it all year. And for me, it really started my prior firm, which I was at for 17 years. We had a bit of a video game in eSports practice, but it was kind of ad hoc. You know, there was just a couple of people that were into it. And you know, we were kicking around marketing ideas there. Nothing like this. But it never really went anywhere. And the one thing I love about Saul Ewing is their marketing department is really second to none. If you bring them a great idea and like you said, your bosses love it. They're going to do it. And so, you know, they already had one of the reasons I wanted to go there was they already had an established eSports and video game practice group, which has led by my colleague Al Coleman out in Minneapolis and he does work for version one and rocker. And a lot of other a lot of other entities in the eSports space. And they already had this established practice, but I didn't feel like it was being talked about enough. And like everyone else during the pandemic, you know, I had the idea of, well, I'm going to be at home anyway. Let's think about what we can do with a video series. And I came up with this concept of lawyers with game and I thought it would be a great idea to have some of our existing clients come on and talk about some of their experiences. And we did that and we put together we still have one more episode that's left to drop in the next week or two. Oh, wow. And then we're hopefully going to do it again next year with some more and different clients and maybe other people as well. Maybe someone like you. Would come on and talk to us about your experiences. But we just kind of wanted to and the other part of it is, you know, a lot of my colleagues at Saul Ewing also have an interest in gaming. They have a game system at home. Now it's a different levels. In some cases, they play with their kids. In some cases, they play on their own time. Maybe not as a zealous as you or I are about it. But they're all gamers. And they're all into it. And I thought, you know, relaying that to the people who might hire us as attorneys was something important. And that we knew about this world and that we lived in it. And so that was really the ultimate idea and it got approved. And, you know, we spent the last year putting it together and you know, I'm really happy with the way that it came out. I'm happy just watching it..

Saul Ewing Al Coleman Minneapolis
"ewing" Discussed on Esports Network Podcast

Esports Network Podcast

03:03 min | 2 years ago

"ewing" Discussed on Esports Network Podcast

"Welcome into the E Sports Network podcast talking anything and everything eSports related from the players coaches personalities to the companies, the corporations, the more business side of things, you know, a little bit of the paper getting pushed through. It's important as well. And here to kind of help me dissect what he does on his end of things. Let's welcome in Darius Gambino. He is an IP attorney. Partner over at Saul Ewing arnstein's in layers. He's a special chief of course. It has some video gaming eSports and we bring him on welcome him in. Come on, Gary, how you doing this morning? I'm doing fantastic, Kevin. Thank you for having me. So just to give you guys a quick little oversight of Darius, he's been working in the legal space for what over 20 years or so, specializing, of course, IP, trademark copyright law. It's a kind of a very interesting field nowadays with gaming and eSports and streaming and everything popping up. Of course, helping protect clients in the patent and trademark litigations. I mean, I've heard I've read it somewhere that you were one of the best trial lawyers when it comes to this field. So I'm hoping that with a podcast, it's kind of the same thing, right? Asking questions and answering. So I can't thank you enough for taking time out of your day to come on the show and give us your perspective from your window of the legal world if you will. Yeah, absolutely. Well, if you read it somewhere on the Internet, it must be true, so I appreciate the comment about being a great trial lawyer. But I'm happy to be on and to talk about some intellectual property issues in the video gaming and eSports space, which I really love. I mean, we all love it. You love it so much. You started a video series for your firm called lawyers with game, and you have special guests on there and in discussions, of course, surrounding gaming and eSports. So just for people to know, this is not some, you know, he's not just been working in the legal space for 20 years, never touched a controller. No, he knows what he's doing. And we should welcome him with open arms. So we'll get into the lawyers with game a little bit later on, but let's start off with a little bit of your background. You have 20 plus years of experience. Where did your interest in this kind of litigation come from? What led you to become a lawyer slash attorney in this space? Yeah, well, I mean, it kind of all started back when I was considering what my major was going to be in I went to Villanova for undergraduate. Go cats. Yes. And you know, I was kind of looking at some different things. I thought I wanted to maybe go to law school. My father was a math teacher and a math administrator who's very into math and what we call stem today. We didn't call it that back then. But he was very into that. And he pushed me because I had an interest in engineering to get an electrical engineering degree at Villanova. And he said to me, you know what? You can always go to law school. And so I did that. And then my next transition was to work at the patent and trademark office as a patent examiner because you have to have a technical background to do that. Got into patent law on the side on the government side of things..

Darius Gambino Saul Ewing arnstein Darius Gary Kevin Villanova
"ewing" Discussed on At The Races With Steve Byk

At The Races With Steve Byk

03:37 min | 2 years ago

"ewing" Discussed on At The Races With Steve Byk

"Training. Title.

"ewing" Discussed on At The Races With Steve Byk

At The Races With Steve Byk

07:30 min | 2 years ago

"ewing" Discussed on At The Races With Steve Byk

"Are. We go all right as we wait for. Wait for show. I'll tell you that here. Let me give you the you quick A quick glance ahead today at colonial. You've got the victory gallop. The love sign And and they actually spread. They spread this out a little bit Today the first stake three. Oh nine which goes as the as the fourth. And that's the mile sixteenth for the boys including a personal one of my personal favorites co-ord- maker for mrs charles rodney jenkins the love signed for the phillies. And mayors goes is the sixth. And in here. You've got the likes of dream. Marie format williams and paris lights bill. Beaumont sending sent a contingent down. You got the seeking the pearl. Going seven eighths. These are the phillies in mayors. This goes as the seventh and in fact shows got finding fame and Franks get in here for vermont. One of the three that he sent down and trump. And larry johnson larry's own bread. The money's never enough time and then the chesapeake goes is the eighth where she told me go brittany russell gold lackey For damon dildo vico Muccio this group long-range taty and michelle lovell tries Just might come back on the dirt so four. Really good steaks and There's a strong supporting A strong supporting card as well and that includes That include shook. As i just mentioned and i think he's joining us jug. I'm here there you go. We're just talking about here. The talking about colonial today and You got an opportunity down there with finding fame in that. In that seven eighths race came up pretty tough race. But i'm looking forward to rob or you know she's coming off a good race and she's trained good going into it so we'll see what well and then i i'm obliged to mention the philly that that Everybody everybody loves certainly fans of The movie election Tracy flick All right all right pick flick. Not today though. Let's talk about saturday and obviously the opportunity for For code of honor and the is land to go down there that that's a that's got to be very satisfying Steppingstone turned out to be a good spot for him out. Sorta looking for an allowance race up here for him. but i didn't really want running. This thing came up on my radar. And it will just born you trained. Well you know obviously went down and ran will be talk about preparations and and You know the whole where you are with him and and you know how things unfold from here if all goes right well obviously i would like to run into woodward's but you know i'm to pay close attention to to him. I mean at six weeks. He all about sal. It's okay but You know we always does run run. Well pray and you know But that's why. I like running in the woods. Thank you bounce the spine off of the layoff and We'll keep you on I i i know that Your last trip. I'm coming to you from del. Mar by the way as i mentioned to you while back that we're heading out here for pacific classic week Is he Is he a classic candidate. Would you would you come back out. here obviously. Can't throw it out. You know what i mean. East coast soldiers. That had a whole lot of out there on the dirt But you know we need to be there. The clark handicap the louisville silver ball game. He's doing really really well and The way ran yesterday whereas up the pace of saturday Which is a pig out there. I think and and he wouldn't leave it out. Well here he is at at the age of five and after missing this much time. I mean you're you're in a position where you know. Obviously there's some things in mind you know to to round out his resume. Well of course you don't mean to. Hopefully that would like we were all we can be competitive with a top level and We're exactly let him tell. Tell telephone somewhere along the line. And he's not but You know. I think he went through some dif- different periods. You know going from two to three. He was a little bit. You know testy and then You know last year. After clark has getting ready for the pegasus and you know he was doing fine but he won't do appropriate and you know he didn't run bad in there but he didn't really have the you know elected to give him a good tavel and so he went home after that and never went back into train. Sixty or seventy days. And you know i think maybe that that kind of brought everything together. And he's right now. He's a good sound holes and He's like what he's doing. You know field that big time frame here Who's been up here. you know he just. He likes his all. The track likes a important any train. Here where wells. A two year old and you. He did very well. This is a five. Well it has he has. He changed back as a mature horse. I mean you and your thank physically. He's a lot stronger than he was. you know that that was any was before. And you know. I like i like what he looks like. And the parents right now and he seems to be happy with what he's doing and You know we just hope that that continues well code of honor the noble mission for mr farage and basically approaching a career-best big with the wind and Actually it's funny It it you know he. He was placed. I of course in the jockey club gold cup but second in In the calcio When he ran when he ran his best numbers up until yesterday but This was this was the kind of performance when you bring a horseback At five.

mrs charles rodney jenkins Marie format williams phillies brittany russell gold lackey damon dildo vico Muccio range taty michelle lovell Tracy flick larry johnson Beaumont Franks chesapeake vermont larry paris rob woodward East coast del louisville
"ewing" Discussed on At The Races With Steve Byk

At The Races With Steve Byk

02:27 min | 2 years ago

"ewing" Discussed on At The Races With Steve Byk

"Four hundred twenty thousand dollars keeneland yearling and louis as just unstoppable. I don't know how else to characterize it and my prankster. The intimacy of another stonestreet bread. This went out of my wand girl. The flower alley mayor and six hundred thousand dollar phase a select Short yearly sale purchase by babylon alot. So it looks like they've got themselves another nice course. Seems like the the lows on a steady basis. Got a couple of sources a year. This was just a explosive debut. So todd todd with a big big weekend let's Also note in the lake placid and technical announce south clermont. This rabab bloodstock kingman philly and for those that kind of leaned heavily. I was trying to get clever and thought maybe there was a chance that that ego trip or or runaway rumor might be able to get involved. So i kinda i've played it. Two different ways actually In terms of saratoga carp this play versus the cross country Protecting allowances on the front end under jose ortiz. And heading for the qe to.

todd todd south clermont lake placid saratoga jose ortiz
The Hero from Season One

Scuba Shack Radio

08:03 min | 2 years ago

The Hero from Season One

"It's time for another installment of si-hun it's still alive and this time we're going back to season one episode twenty-six the hero and it premiered on july fifth nineteen fifty eight sixty three years ago on my third birthday. The hero opens up with mike underwater. Telling us these working with. Dr george snider on a project to turn ocean plants into food. Apparently they need funding for their research. And that's where a millionaire elliot conway and his wife. Gloria come in you see. Elliot is a big game hunter and he wants to take his hunting underwater and he wants to hunt for sharks and giant squid only problem. He doesn't know how to dive. He needs mike to teach him and gloria so he can bag. What's down there. Mike price five thousand dollars now since it's going to research glorious says it's a worthy cause and a tax write off elliot agrees to pay like twenty five hundred dollars upfront and the remaining twenty five hundred when he gets his first shark. So now they're off to a place known for sharks portable ongko and they go in elliott's private plane and that plane. Looks like a dc. Three named misguided gal now. Puerto blanco is on the west coast of south america. A small fishing village with a new hotel. Not much more. Just as they're getting off the plane guy comes running up and he introduces himself as dr gomez. Any needs to use of elliott's plane to get a sick child to a hospital over three hours away. Elliot agrees so now. They're all set to start their scuba training. And mike tells. Gloria things will be okay if elliott follows all precautions glorious says he never does mikes response he better now before they start training mike scouts out the deep area offshore for sharks. We see a variety of sharks white tips black tips and even some clown fish interesting. Now we start to see what scuba training was like in nineteen fifty eight. Mike takes the couple through snorkeling skills and then talks about how the equipment is delicate and technical. He tells them there is only one way and that is safely theory in practice. That's what it takes. But elliott is getting impatient in the next scene we see mike demonstrating what happens when a balloon is inflated at depth and brought up boom. Goes the balloon back on the boat. Mike tells them it's called an air. Embolism and you must always excel. Exhale as you extend. Gloria asks mike. How fast and he tells her no faster than your bubbles. Elliott wants to know. When do we stop learning and go hunting. He wants his shark. Glorious says she's tired and wants to sit out the next dive. Elliot tries to coax her into diving. But mike says it's dangerous to dive if you're tired so now we switch back to the hotel and we can clearly see the tension between elliott gloria. Gloria tells mike that that elliott is a mixed up millionaire. He's an architect. Who inherited the conway oil company when his father was killed in an auto accident. Elliott doesn't want to really be an architect anymore. Just a big game hunter. Now elliott comes into the scene and he's carrying a spear gun that he's all proud of its cocked and loaded. Mike is furious and he and elliot start to argue. And in the argument elliot drops the spear gun. It goes off narrowly missing gloria and lodging in palm tree. Now we switch back underwater. Mike says elliott has be elliott has become pretty good. Shot with the spear gun. And they're shooting at this target. That set up kind of lake for archery. But mike says he just needs to stop pointing a gun at mike. Now we switch back to land where mike. Gloria elliott are working on camera to document the shark on elliott. Says he wants to order. Chicken cacciatore for dinner might tell them. Oh no that's too spicy before diving. Says okay good now. Probably order to and elliot goes off. It's just mike gloria now. Gloria tells mike she's unhappy made a big mistake in marrying elliot. Mike tries to console her and she tells mike he's sweet and she puts her head on his chest. Elliot sees this and is upset. What's going to happen when they go on the shark hunt the next morning. They are at the dive site. Mike cuisine i finds a shark and is ready to take them down for the hunt. Just as soon as you can get the bait ready now. The three of them are down below at seventy five feet. Gloria has the camera as mike elliott head off to the hunt just end we switched to the surface in a boat is approaching. Its dr gomez. He needs elliott's playing again. As you get close to the dive boat. He throws his anchor over the side and it crashes down into gloria breaking her rag might just happens to look back and sees the glory is in trouble and they both rush back elliott steps in and starts buddy breathing with gloria the sharks. Fresh off debate sense trouble. As the big one continues to circle. Mike is impressed. With elliott's calmness and sends them to the surface while mike fights a rearguard action again and he spears the big shark. We then see all the divers back on board and dr gomez says we must go sure back at the hotel. Elliott s mike. Why don't they haven't hospital here. In puerto blanco might tells him. It's always money. Justin dr gomez emerges and skulls mike for letting gloria dive in her condition. She's expecting a child in six months. And dr gomez congratulates elliott by saying congratulations senor. Now you need to take her back to the states to the hospital. That does elliott is going to build a hospital in portable. Ongko and keith tells mike it'll be done in six months. Mike says that can't be done elliott. Replies you don't know me when i go to work elliott conway the hero. You'd recognize him. That's larry hagman. J are jr ewing from dallas or tony nelson from my dream of jeannie Mike nelson tony nelson coincidence. Who knows

Sea Hunt Vintage Scuba Vintage Tv Elliott Mike Gloria Dr Gomez Elliot Mike Underwater Dr George Snider Elliot Conway Puerto Blanco Mike Price Elliott Gloria Gloria Elliott Mike Gloria South America
"ewing" Discussed on Undisclosed

Undisclosed

07:52 min | 2 years ago

"ewing" Discussed on Undisclosed

"Joining me today is christine. Pay jack. She's an attorney at the state appellate defender office and was the attorney for durell ewing and his most recent appeal in twenty fourteen. She received the norris j thomas award for excellence in appellate advocacy based on a representation of two clients and successful exonerations. Hey christina's great talking to you. Nice talking to you again and also with us colin miller. He's an associate dean and professor at the university of south carolina. School of law and one of the hosts of undisclosed hagan colin. Good congratulations on such a compact information-rich and infuriating series. I really enjoy listening to it. As i was editing. It and then. I listened to it again after it dropped in the feed. Something i don't usually do. So it's really terrific colin and you hinted in the podcast that People of note involved in the case might be listening. Is that true. Do you know that to be true in contact with someone in the office. That's making the decision about whether to take this case back to trial and my understanding. Is that the people who make the decisions are listening to. It and i hope alternately that they make the decision not to take this back trial i made that pitch in my email sending this latest episode out. So we'll see fingers crossed. Oh my god. What's so great to have multiple platforms right on which to make your case in that way. It's it's really something. Well if the people in that office are listening to this i would say please don't retry too. That's my pitch to you. So christine with the granting of a new to durell recently becoming final. You have finished your work on this case. So how did you first come to represent durell. Yes i'm public defender so our office was appointed his case So that's how generally came to us. I it came to me. Because i was actually at the time i had been The editor of a book. Our office does on habeas cases. And obviously that's important. I know you didn't call and get into all of the appellate background here. But his case came back to the state courts through the federal courts and so my knowledge of that process made it sort of natural for me to to get the case. What are your impressions of durrell from working with him on this. I'm going gonna tell you my first impression when i was listening to The first episode is that he Which already knew he just loves that movie just mercy it is like his his favorite which You know bryan. Stevenson is great. And so i can see why he he likes it and you know i really feel like he is very much a force of nature you know. He is very persistent. Smart guy. I am not surprised that his party planning business was so successful at such a young age as he certainly still hard at work on his own case and also really seems dedicated to his family. I mean i'm really struck by his alibi being that he was at that repast and he's the kind of person it seems that people know when he's in the room and so certainly they would know when he's not right. I certainly think that's true. Yeah i'm curious christine. On your thoughts we talked about this in the most recent addendum about alibis and whether or not people of color their alibis are less likely to be believed in many cases. I'm curious about your thoughts on that. You have experience with that and other cases it's interesting. I think i mentioned this to colin I've heard a lot of times from trial attorneys in in the courthouse in downtown detroit Frank murphy that juries don't like alibis but listening to the podcast. I wondered if it wasn't really more true that jurors don't like the alibis of black people. Yeah yeah i mean. Certainly i think in other cases that we've talked about call and that's been the case right. Yeah absolutely i was discussing with. Christine is i've just done research with kayla vena emory. Were we surveyed defense attorneys in the southeast in chicago and got sort of the poll results. In sort of consistent with a christina's saying is unless you really have something concrete. An objective to corroborate your alibi witnesses especially for family jurors do not let kinda pine alibi evidence and so in this case. It's sort of inbetween right. Because on the one hand we don't have anything concrete. They can say he was definitely there at this time. On the other hand through describing. This repast this audio visual show going through the life of the person who lost her life which is a key part of repass as we heard it somewhere. In between and as with christina. I wonder how much of this is. Alibis generally versus alibis for people of color. Yeah i can't help. But think of the anon- say ed case and the mosque alibi. Right that you know it just seemed to be a non factor for the jury. In that case i'm christine. Why don't juries like alibi. Testimony do you have any idea. I guess i don't know what the answer to that question is. I really only unsuccessful cases right so it makes it a little harder to to know the answer to that. I think though a lot of times it can be that. There isn't anything particularly definite. There's always a moment right where people can say. Did you have your eye on them the whole time. And you know. I mean people can't always track you one hundred percent of the time and And who are you spending your time with people who care about you usually. So it's the rare alibi. Some sort of jek tive you know. I was definitely someplace else at some other time. Colin is there something here where it's again that bias where juries feel like even if the person says they have an alibi they wouldn't be on trial if that were true is that that's sort of like a juror implicit bias. Sometimes right yeah. I think so definitely that kind of ties into christine's point where the case is she sees are the ones robbie. Alibi failed. well taken that back. Further right for a prosecutor to take a case to trial. Despite an alibi that prosecutor who's so concerned with conviction rates must feel pretty good they can convince twelve men and women the jury that that alibi is either false or mistaken and so there probably are a decent number of cases where persons arrested maybe charge. They have alibi and the prosecutors dropped the charges or there's a really favorable plea bargain so we're looking at this subset of cases where for whatever reason the prosecution thinks. Despite this alibi. I can prove guilt beyond reasonable Well i wanna talk about the witness episode the eyewitness episode the identification in the case by husband and wife. Raymond gendai love now. The team question these identifications because they gave differing descriptions of the shooter and were made largely based upon allegedly seeing him through rear view and side view mirrors. There was also some question about the way. These identifications were obtained right colin. I mean and there's different testimony at trial and the prosecution kinda tries to paint over that but gendai is quite clear. Several times to say. I looked at this photo array for almost five minutes before making my pick and raymond absolutely and he as be heard in that episode says several times. I pick someone else out before i picked out guerrilla ewing and has mitchell eisner expert. Helpfully contributed right usually. It's less than ten seconds to have reliable identification. You're going more than that. It's unreliable.

Christine Colin christina christine durrell Frank murphy Stevenson today chicago colin miller two clients mitchell eisner raymond Raymond gendai one first episode first impression less than ten seconds twelve men of law
"ewing" Discussed on Undisclosed

Undisclosed

02:43 min | 2 years ago

"ewing" Discussed on Undisclosed

"One of drill. Ewing's nicknames and i understand that you qian's be given the nickname apple. Where does that nickname of apple come from apple and was always eating apples that i had a big always remind. No map was working for him. And so the state cell tower records for that cell phone hadn't reviewed by fbi special agent. Christopher s a member of the cellular analysis survey team aka cast for those of you who listen to our non said series. You might recall the fbi. Special agent chad gerald who testified at the reopened pcr preceding was also member of cast. And all the same issues raised about cell tower testimony there apply here as well specifically barden palace for the repast held is about four miles east to the site of the shooting as the crow flies and slightly over five miles by car. The heart of hess's testimony was about to sell terra calls at three zero seven pm and four. Oh one pm. The pink towers that were closer to the scene of the shooting. Been the site of the repast given that. The murder occurred at about three forty pm. The pink couldn't used to show that giral ewing was at or near the intersection of heartburn van dyke at the time of the shooting but they were used by the state to challenge drills alibi. That didn't leave the repass between about one or one thirty pm in about five pm but does this alibi argument. Actually holding you water. The answer is no for two distinct reasons. First let's look at has his testimony in the case of three men who allegedly traveled from philadelphia to grand rapids and detroit michigan to rub two jewelry stores in addressing. The defendants challenged his testimony. The sixth circuit ruled as follows. Testifying about how you sell side analysis track. The phones in question i e philadelphia to new buffalo. Can your at the time of the first robbery to near tab at the time of the second robbery and then back to philadelphia has explained that cell phones connect to a nearby tower. But not necessarily the closest tower rather. The phones connects the tower with a strongest signal so distances just one factor along with others such as geography physical obstruction interaction with other towers or the number of users. A cell phone connect to a tower as much as seven miles away but obviously a funding philadelphia would not connect to attaran michigan. Norwood a phone in grand rapids. Connect to attaran detroi- hundred fifty miles away but wasn't even durrell. Who is actually using the cellphone. This takes us to the second issue and the reason that has his testimony.

Christopher philadelphia seven miles second issue three men durrell First hundred second robbery first robbery one factor four thirty pm grand rapids two distinct reasons attaran about three forty pm over five miles one pm about four miles
"ewing" Discussed on Undisclosed

Undisclosed

01:38 min | 2 years ago

"ewing" Discussed on Undisclosed

"Follow one man's journey that led him to the capital insurrection and learn how one woman took on an army of confederate sympathizers and her alabama town. You can hear these stories and more on season. Two of sounds like hey subscribed today wherever you get your podcasts Last episode we laid out the entirety of the case against durell ewing based on allegedly seeing debbie watson shooter through a rear view mirror and maybe through a quick glimpse over her shoulder. Gendai love identified durell at a photo array for about five minutes with the big ticket. Items for you told me. Five minutes Arguments does sitted recognize anybody and after apparently picking someone else out of a photo array gendai husband. Raymond said the durrell looks close to the perpetrator based on allegedly seeing the shooter. Three rear view and side view mirror. In other words raymond made a negative identification followed by what i eyewitness. Experts like mitchell is in call relative judgment and relative judgments are more likely to happen under these circumstances. See the circumstances you're telling me about with the wise So.

Raymond raymond durell mitchell today alabama Five minutes one woman Two durrell about five minutes Gendai one man gendai Three rear watson sounds
Guess How Much LeBron James Gets Paid For A Second of Floor Time

The Dan Bongino Show

01:42 min | 2 years ago

Guess How Much LeBron James Gets Paid For A Second of Floor Time

"I just saw a disturbing video on social media. LeBron who's I don't know. Pay. What do you think He's paid per second in the MBA producer? Mike, Can you go with that? What do you think? LeBron salary per second of floor time in the embassy? I don't know. Maybe a couple 100 bucks. Maybe a couple 1000. I don't know. I really don't know what LeBron makes. I don't watch the MBA anymore. Since they decided woke ism was the way to go and I decided it wasn't But LeBron, I guess the playoffs we're going on. Is that right? Is it the playoffs? I really I have stopped watching. After Patrick Ewing retired with the next years ago and Get the way this is LeBron makes $162 per second per second. Listen, Life has been good. Thanks to your generosity and listening to my show. I'm telling you, I don't make no $162 a second. No way. I don't have to do that. But it's not anywhere close to that. 162 was second. Hold on. Let's put a little timer on this show right here. We have got a timer. Stopwatch. Here we go. For those of you watching a vaccination at home. One. You. There we go. LeBron just made hundreds five seconds. This guy's gonna be close to $1000 to So why am I bringing this up? Because last night? Apparently, the Lakers are playing the Phoenix Suns, and they got their butts were pretty bad. Is that right again? I'll follow sports and LeBron who plays for the Lakers. He was like, Yeah, I'm not going to stay to the end of the game. Just gonna go to the locker room and disappear. Wow. Wow. I wonder he was going to the locker room to make a comment about the Chinese Communist Party torturing people. Of course not. He's probably making a comment about how should we shouldn't talk about the Chinese Communist Party torturing people?

Lebron Patrick Ewing Mike Lakers Phoenix Suns Chinese Communist Party
AnnaLynne McCord Reveals Dissociative Identity Disorder Diagnosis

Jason and Alexis

01:02 min | 2 years ago

AnnaLynne McCord Reveals Dissociative Identity Disorder Diagnosis

"About some news from actress Anna Lindh. McCord. This is making some pretty big headlines. Today. She is saying that she has a disassociative identity disorder that she was diagnosed with this And she's opening up about it. This identity disorder by the way, previously known as multiple personality disorder, If you've heard it referred to is that you can know that the terminology has changed. It is now called disassociative identity disorder. And, um, you know, she's been in all sorts of things, um, 902 and no nip Tuck. She says Now. Yeah, that's right. Off course. Are you serious? I'm serious. She was in the re boot She played Yes. Everything coming back tonight. She wasn't the reboot. She was played Christopher Ewing's girlfriend, Jessie Metcalf's girlfriend. What is your name again? I'm sorry. Anna Lindh. McCord. Okay? Yeah. Anna Lindh.

Anna Lindh Mccord Christopher Ewing Jessie Metcalf
Georgetown Hoyas Unlikely To Win Against Colorado

Wendell's World & Sports

00:59 min | 2 years ago

Georgetown Hoyas Unlikely To Win Against Colorado

"Tell you right now. Much as i love patrick ewing as much as i love america's coach doing as much as i love my georgetown. Hoyas i think. I pretty much Solidify that if you listen to me if you listen to my podcast especially the last podcast. That you know i am a devotee. I am a cult member. Follower of the georgetown holiest basketball program with the reason but even i had to be realistic to know that their chances against colorado too good not very good still remember. This is a team that had to win the big east tournament to get to the ncaa tournament so Not i mean. I don't know expectations. i don't know. I didn't think they'd get past villanova so i don't know i don't know everything right now is gravy with georgetown. So you know what if they beat. Colorado a man. I'll be dancing in the street. Mcmartin vendettas if they make it to the sweet sixteen. Be dancing on the ceiling. Lionel richie but I'm realistic in the fact that a pretty good chance decent chance strong shantha dilute

Patrick Ewing Georgetown Hoyas America Basketball Colorado Ncaa Mcmartin Villanova Lionel Richie
After nearing a deal for probation, ‘serial stowaway’ is arrested again at Chicago O’Hare

San Diego's Morning News with Ted and LaDona

01:03 min | 2 years ago

After nearing a deal for probation, ‘serial stowaway’ is arrested again at Chicago O’Hare

"You might remember the serial stowaway Maryland Hartman. She was notorious for getting past security and onto airplanes with no ticket. It's happened time and time again. She managed to escape the residential facility, where she was ordered held and make her way back to O'Hare to Ewing has the rest from Chicago. Hartmann has been living in a residential facility her Russ comes two weeks after a plea deal for a pending case. She was had to get 18 months of probation and court ordered mental health treatment. At noon Tuesday, Her ankle monitor outfitted with GPS was tracked, leaving that same residential facility and showed her heading for O'Hare International Airport Terminal one Device even has a phone built into it. It was called, but Maryland Hartmann didn't answer. An alarm went off after it was activated on Hartmann's ankle monitor. She was taken into custody by the Chicago Police Department. Hartmann did not enter any secure areas this time, but she's admitted to doing this at least 30 times. Hartman is reported to suffer from bipolar

Hartmann Hartman Maryland Ewing O'hare International Airport T Russ Chicago Chicago Police Department Bipolar
March Madness Arrives: 68-Team Field Revealed

The Herd with Colin Cowherd

01:04 min | 2 years ago

March Madness Arrives: 68-Team Field Revealed

"Aa tournament. We'll be missing some notable teams sierras. We've been discussing today. Regulars taki duke and louisville did not make the field sixty eight this year. It's the first time since nineteen seventy six at all. Three schools have missed the tournament in the same year. Now louisville's a chance to make it if a team currently in the field fails to make cope with protocol. But obviously that's that's gonna be an outlier situation for them making it like they still didn't actually tournaments i. I'm very excited for the tournament. I love march madness and verse weekends. the best. it's the best friday saturday now. This year. It's friday saturday sunday. Money out there doing switched it up a little bit where it starts later. And they're all playing in in the same place as well. Obviously kobe changed. The first weekend is by far and away the best and now he's loved that there's one one team that makes a run everyone gets the learn about them and their school and their players. And i'm really excited for georgetown yuccas. Patrick ewing hit has not gone great so far and then they had a great tournament and the all. This is interesting. I love it citing basketball's legendary. I'm really excited for the

Taki Duke Louisville Kobe Patrick Ewing Georgetown Basketball
Washington, DC's Georgetown enters NCAA tournament as No. 12 seed in East Region

Mornings on the Mall with Brian Wilson

00:30 sec | 2 years ago

Washington, DC's Georgetown enters NCAA tournament as No. 12 seed in East Region

"Is set for March Madness and five teams from the D M V. R in none a bigger surprise in 12 seed Georgetown, which upset Creighton. Win the Big East Tournament coach Patrick Ewing. We work hard. We fought hard We've got on each other. We hated on each other. We are kicked him in the butt. We did everything that we needed to do to get to this point, and I think it's paid off Virginia's in as 1/4 seed Maryland and Virginia Tech as 10th feeds and Mount ST Mary's has a play in team. They opened the tournament on Thursday

Patrick Ewing Creighton Georgetown Mount St Mary Virginia Tech Virginia Maryland
NCAA Tournament West Preview

Courtside with Seth Greenberg

04:18 min | 2 years ago

NCAA Tournament West Preview

"It's ncaa tournament time we had championship. Week was absolutely spectacular. You had a championship game. That wasn't so spectacular in america conference by the big twelve was tremendous big. Ted was tremendous. Because you know what those two leagues are tremendous all season. Long games aren't games. they're events the acc was anti climactic but great for josh passenger and the greatest shield in the history of life. The big east to me was phenomenal. I mean patrick ewing. Not only does he no longer needed credential again but he got into madison square garden and walked away with four games in four days and his team played like an old vintage georgetown team. Pac twelve stolen a bid which was really cool. Wayne tinkle's got it was who was on the hot seat. It was so cool is good coach. A good person attack boil. Who's another great guy still going tournament. So i thought championship week was absolutely spectacular. Your take oh. I thought it was great. I look. I'm gonna tell you houston's legit at chance due to their games including the championship game in the ac. That is a legitimate. I was happy that drake dot in. I was happy that twenty five and four guy in. I thought that was terrific. I love the fact that the drew brothers are in the tournament. The demolishing of creighton shocked the living in. Hell on me. And says i'm telling you i like when you lose guys mclaughlin aquino record and next thing you know man. What are you doing better. The next year matt pain and getting himself in the top four seeds after losing two guys eastern and harms but overawe a look championship. Week was the sec. Tournament was off the charts with the championship. Game and college basketball delivers it delivers every damn nights. Let's go to the west ready. Let's do it all right now. Let's do this number one seat. I was thinking what games in the upper half of the west. Are you looking forward to see. I wanna see what. Oklahoma can do eight nine game now. Maybe it doesn't matter because you're gonna play gonzaga. But i think this i think if you're gonna play along krueger team whether you're konso martyn missouri. Who has struggled or whether you're gonzaga. You know you're going to play a very very good basketball team. And i had them earlier in the year they can shoot it. They defend it. They play hard. I don't think they're overly talented and the kid to get something done but lon kruger is so good at dictating pace. That if i'm sitting here with gonzaga i wanna lesser coach in my second round game assuming that they win. What do you got. Well you know i actually. I think missouri can win that game. A jeremiah tells me he's going to have to go out guard on out on a primitive 'cause they're playing brady at the five and they've run them all over the place on the other side though rate mattis gutter guard that dude on the block to is become a good player control martin's team when they're older and more mature and her physical they are talking tournament. Think about what he did tennessee. So you know this is going to be really good game because you've got a tough physical team in missouri. You've got a team that attacks match ups plays almost four guards in oklahoma. I'm actually leaning towards missouri in this match up. Well you're going to be wrong and that's okay you can be. It's okay. I can be wrong. It will be the first time won't be the last time and you know that's right. I don't have either. We'll on from barry. I but i touched on that but also got to say tony bennett said that most of his team is in quarantine south. Now i don't know about you but that preston kid that plays at ohio university. Ooh yeah he can go and all of a sudden. You're talking about a team that wait a second. I know i know. Virginia's good. I know virginia came on. I know they ended up with the one seat in the acc tournament. But seth you're playing against a hot as hell ohio university team. A team led by jeff bowls. Who frankly he's the perga- guide ohio you because he loves ohio you. He played there with the with the shock of the mac. But when you're playing a team in quarantine sat that tells me they're not practicing. That tells me this is gonna be a hats. This'll be a good game regardless.

Wayne Tinkle Mclaughlin Aquino Patrick Ewing Missouri Gonzaga ACC Madison Square Garden Lon Kruger Ncaa Georgetown Basketball TED Creighton Josh Drake Houston Krueger America
Washington, D.C.'s Georgetown wins Big East tournament over Creighton

WTOP 24 Hour News

00:51 sec | 2 years ago

Washington, D.C.'s Georgetown wins Big East tournament over Creighton

"Is headed back to the NC double a tournament for the first time since 2015. The Hoyas smashed Creighton 73 to 48 in the Big East Tournament title game. The wind also comes on the 49th anniversary of the day. The program hired the late Hall of Fame coach John Thompson, head coach. Patrick Ewing was asked Postgame if he was surprised by his team's four day for victory performance up in New York City. No, I'm not surprised. You know, I believe in these kids. I think they believe in me. You know, I keep telling them from the first day we met most we got on campus. I told him we have We had enough talent to win the Big East to make it to the N C. A a tournament And once you get to the N C, a a tournament, Anything is possible. The

Hoyas Creighton Patrick Ewing John Thompson NC Hall Of Fame New York City
Georgetown Wins Big East Tournament, Heads To NCAA

CBS Sports Radio

00:10 sec | 2 years ago

Georgetown Wins Big East Tournament, Heads To NCAA

"Going to the N C. A. A tournament for the first time under Patrick Ewing. He's the first person to win the Big East tournament as a player and a coach. Meanwhile, a

Patrick Ewing
No. 17 Creighton tops UConn to reach Big East finals

CBS Sports Radio

00:30 sec | 2 years ago

No. 17 Creighton tops UConn to reach Big East finals

"Big East semifinals. Creighton tops Yukon 59 to 56. They'll play Georgetown in the championship game, Patrick Ewing and the Hoyas beat Seton Hall 66. The 58 the S E. C quarterfinals. Alabama blows out Mississippi State 85 48 Arkansas over Missouri. 72 64 in the A. C. It was Houston beating two lane in the quarterfinal. 77 52 Pac 12 semi finals Just gone Final Colorado a 70 to 70 win Over USC

Hoyas Beat Seton Hall Patrick Ewing Yukon Georgetown Alabama Mississippi Arkansas Missouri Houston Colorado USC
Tom Brady, Tampa Bay Buccaneers agree to extension

Skip and Shannon: Undisputed

00:13 sec | 2 years ago

Tom Brady, Tampa Bay Buccaneers agree to extension

"And the box reached an agreement today. That loss meant to tampa through the twenty twenty season. The deal is actually a four year. Extension that voids to a one year extension saving the bucks nineteen million against the cap this year.

Tampa
'I thought this was my building,' Knicks legend Ewing says after security stops at MSG

Skip and Shannon: Undisputed

00:39 sec | 2 years ago

'I thought this was my building,' Knicks legend Ewing says after security stops at MSG

"Georgiana. That's the big east. Tournament semifinals after queuing. A modern to an upset win over cops seeded villanova yesterday on f s one. It was one of the biggest wins of his coaching career. But after the game. He say that he felt disrespected by madison square garden insecurity in the arena where he became a legend plankton hicks pickle. Listen i do want to say one thing though. I thought this was my building. And i feel terrible. That i'm getting stopped accosted as passes everybody in this building should know who they i am and i'm getting stopped. I can't move around his building. Like i i was like what the hell is this

Georgiana Villanova Madison Square Garden
RADCast Outdoors Episode #37: Al Lindner Discusses Faith, Family and Fishing - burst 01

RADCast Outdoors

1:05:47 hr | 3 years ago

RADCast Outdoors Episode #37: Al Lindner Discusses Faith, Family and Fishing - burst 01

"On this episode of red cast outdoors we sit down with legendary fishermen of famer and co founder of in fisherman lindy equipment co owner of lender media. Al lindor course. Everybody knows al from his days on in fisherman and has seen him on a number of different tv shows including the angling edge and on this episode of rod cast outdoors. We sit down. We visit with him about a number of different topics including fishing family. Fame his faith and of course. What are his favorite things to fish for to this day. We hope you'll sit down. Relax and enjoy this episode of raw cast outdoors. Sean rad cast is on hunting fishing and everything in between this is red cast outdoor from the borders ten cast studio here david merrill and patrick edwards again outlets gay debut on the program. I do wanna a quick shout out the ending curdle cousin for helping. Set this up with al this kind of a big deal. thanks dante. yeah so really. Appreciate danny and I'll just want to welcome you to the shell. Thanks for taking time out of your busy schedule to hang out with this on a podcast for a little bit and looking forward to nothing makes me happier than a cold in minnesota. If i can't be out fishing. I should be talking about the. It'd be well below zero tonight. So that's probably one of the big motivations for patrick and i to start this podcast. We both have young families. And we're both avidly into the outdoors whether it's fishing hunting or of both. So that's our goal is to You know recruit new new anglers and new hunters to the to the outdoors around. The timing is really appropriate for unit. We've got a whole new. Recruitment a coming in because the cold or sport is never seen before experience in the outdoors and they need our need some guidance. in cases do you know respect the resource in S an important part of what's happening now with these whole. Nobody's covering it. Yeah it's it's been fun to watch you over the years. 'cause you you've really helped kind of teach everybody about that and i know as a kid. I always look forward to outdoor life coming in the mail and also in fisherman magazine because that was that was kind of the thing was you know i wanted to learn more about fishing and growing up in cheyenne wyoming. It was like a dead zone fishing. I mean there's there's really not much closer unless you're going to drive like two hours to glendow three and a half hours to seminal five hours to voice in like you just forget about it. There's just nothing there so you're talking about teaching people. I was reading that as much as could. Because i knew when i went. I had to really capitalize on those trips and sell ob. You've done amazing job about that. And i just wanted to know if you could just share some tips with us you know. What's what's in key strategies of getting kids and just other anglers out on the water. What are some good strategies and tips number one number one. Make sure you take him when you can get a bit people. I i mean i can't old is powered pork edges especially with the younger ones. That have a short attention. Spans inter is critical. That baba's going down or something pulling on the end of that line and Are that's one in even with a new adults and we have a lot of those coming into the sport now that have never fished before and yes. They have patients where the young people don't however their patients will wane after one or two trips without getting up by. It's the biggest hinderance that i've seen to our sport and your people neck key is getting a bit a bike. Too late that fire they gotta catch something and You don't wanna take him out in this herbal weather conditions yet the weather good into everything your power to make sure that they get back in there and the reason people fish in continue to fish is they had a good experience and a good experience is something pulling on the end that the wire gets really the reason you're out there. That's what motivates people is the miracle of of this. It is amazing to me. My entire life in this business to see would fish can do this change. Somebody's like yeah. Yeah you know a kid sitting under edging blue gills and all of a sudden nowhere. A two pound bass runs out reminders. That back and grabs your bank. You never had. You're catching a six inch blue gills and having a ball in this best is your hook break where your life forever somebody had never muskie fish. You know they heard something about it. They're they're going out with somebody that knows something about all of a sudden next to the boat. This monster opens his mouth bites on. It's an image yet burns into your into your spirit that change. It never goes away. That's what likes to fire in this sport. And here's why it's so important. That that their two n into good weather to do it in your. That's the key is to get get a matching get a matching get them and then if they're really young after three hours to think to run into live whether you get a few fish rockets there fascinated with fish bouncing around in a live That's the key really. Is the key to keep them motivated. Keep them fishing kit. In a short period of time you know and again with the adult young person after after you know you get them out for two trips. Third time Yeah you're going to say you want to go fishing or meet today too bad experiences them. They're gonna go bad back in play video games. Interests will beer so al. I was fortunate enough to grow up near salt water and my dad in the pacific northwest. We did a lot of salmon and halibut and deep sea and i got introduced very young to fishing. We actually just had a podcast with my dad on talking about starting that fire that you're talking about i'm curious who was the fishing mentor in your life. The person that got you hooked on fishing. Actually my my brother and years my senior and He he took me every weapon time. I was a little kid. Yeah you know. He's seen a bring cash and he shared that he said there was something about it from the time you were little. You're obsessed with fish and fishing and he nurtured that he actually nurtured that dad dad in him being older than i am a yeah you know. He kind of took me under his wing and I had some really good experiences in those years. One of them that that really fed my passion for fishing was my mother and this is kind of strange but a share. That story with you. My brother obviously loved to fish. Yeah yeah you know so. He took me everywhere. Everywhere we go. We fished all pans and lakes and creeks and rivers and between chicago and milwaukee. And there's many of them and we're at every moment we could go go go. He'd be a good way he he took me took me took me My mother really liked to fish and She's seen you know people would ask me at a young age. What do you go to a christmas. Gathering family or friends like this and say l. conference. Yeah what are you do when you grow up bowl recovered. I'm living fishing going to a look at you. Oh okay yeah you don't blow it off my mercury. She she under the guy a brother with it she she at christmas time or birthdays or special event every time all my christmas presents and gifts were the latest greatest fishing tackle in the industry whether it was a ride or real allure magazines books. Anything that that that she fed bed it and never said that's a dumb guy you can make a living in the fishing industry. Yeah you know especially at that time you know that many years ago yeah you know and the only thing you again you know. You had tackle manufacturers at outdoor writers that At that time. What are the inspiring outdoor writers to me as a kid was jason lucas. He wrote for sports afield at that time. And he he wrote a book called lucas on bass and becky. I read it a dozen tanks. That and marked every page variances burned it into i mike and that. So yeah you know. It's experiences like that Then television every member. I n nears our tv tv fishing business. The first one His name was geared about gaddis. The flying fisherman he was the first one hit syndicated television fish and chips and he'd tried different locations all over the country and sheriff is fishing. Experience get out get it and then and then that led diverge award. That was the true Championship fishing and he was the one. Got my fire to get into the fishing industry in do a television show in the business ahead He was here in my hometown. In brainerd minnesota yet We're starting lindy deco company and His producer His name was j jadwin. He gave us a call at the office. What day and he says i am not. I would perjure war championship patient. We've been in the area for three days or even how we went into a well. I want you ask buster and can you help they understand you know the lakes. You're really good bishop. And everybody says go while alkyl corral. You aren't one so says you do show absolutely. We went out and we got a phenomenal show. Shot for hours to get everything done. He's all happy he took off and went back through missouri. And we finished. My brother looks at me at night. We're talking he's internet. Does your television show and talk about the lures that he manufactures. So you know we could do that. We got into. Why don't we start at television fishing. Show and helpless guess what little fire in pakistan. Tv channels that was would but a camera. That's what camera in my brother. Learned how to use it. And how to splice taped together at your rewind these stories and how you get into the game and enter the fishing industry and enter the sport different aspects that are available. All you get these different stories from everybody that that has been there enough to make a living business. But i'll go back to what i say just a little bit. Herb just amazes me. What a fish. A fish do to change. Somebody's stunning to me. How it happens all the time when experience would have been in. Just bam young know. You're right this change. Yeah i agree. It's it's an amazing experience. I i remember catching fish when i was little and how it lit my fire and again i. I promise that i would do this on the podcast. And i hope it's not lost because i you hear this stuff a lot but my friend. Seth ewing who lives in northern idaho and myself we we grew up. Just eating up your your shows and Magazine and and it really did benefit both of us. He's he's an incredible fly fisherman and he he learned a lot from your fly-fishing video that she goes put out with dollberg and You know and i. I love the small mouth and the walleye in those kinds of species and so it's just one of those things where i i hope it's not lost on you when you hear say you know. Thank you so much for doing all of that because it really did inspire a lot of people across the united states in the world To go out and fish to take other people fishing which i think is really cool one of the things that i always enjoyed and my dad and i always enjoyed watching. Fish was just the joy on your face. You were always you know chuckling and laughing and having a great time and we were just living vicariously through you as the wind. Blew about seventy miles an hour through cheyenne. But i mean it's it's just it. It really did make a big difference. And i do want to. I want to ask about this because this is really important to david. Ni- we we both have little kids and we take them out fishing hunting different activities. And you know you have kids of your own. And and i know. He's very influential and big into the fishing businesses. Well but can you talk a little bit about what that was like raising your kids to be fishermen but also you know kind of raising them during that time that you know you're just so busy and you got all these things on with the with the fishing world and the fame that you had going on. How did you manage all those things and still make it a great experience for your kids. They grew up in the business. they did. There's not all all seven right here except in children. I've got two boys all of the kids. even girls. Three of his kids are girls. They all served in the business wing. Some of your friends. At the time we started lindy dako copier reports sinkers learning advertised snow. Rapper mind cars. Were exposed to the business is a family run. I mean all their life you know and they grew up in many different fields yet. You know it other things. But-but-but number stayed in the business in our in the business today like jim. dna billing and mesa troy. Yeah you know and and my daughter niece who worked as a pr rest. For many many years fishermen still welts me A right right material and press releases and things like that you with the gifted in that area but they grew up in the business thing. Yeah and and that way you were able to spend time together so they understood it. They understand the crab and the things that this life style. If you went to make a living a good comfortable living in deficient indiscreet. I don't hurt my myself and i know many people that you and i do not that then ended the business row ripley. Welcome rarities Actor to it these days. It's a lifestyle business that you want to get into anything cup. Lack of time it is. It isn't in ninth the fact you you know you eat sleep twenty four hours or so you go to bed at night thinking in still today at the. That's been in this my life. There is not one and go. That goes by that. I don't read something about fishing. Watch something about fishing. Talk to somebody about dishing. It happens all the time. Not a day goes by where some aspect of it is in touch in my life. A part of my life in My closest friends are pretty much involved in fishing industry. Right closest friends. Are that sparks your question for me. L. and that's you know i'm kinda way way beginning of this journey. I've got a small family run company but it's in the hunting outdoor space. And you know. My boys are being raised growing up when we work right. We have stuff to do. There's it's a small family run business. it's not you know. Dad goes to work at nine. And we're we're done at five and let's go do x and y but my question is long term for me. My dad took me fishing law. And now i go hunting and now. My boys are in a hunting company being raised. How did you see kind of the transition of with raising these kids. In the company in fending fishing industry they stayed on and continued to fish and still thrive as that was our was that a positive experience for them. Oh yes yeah. Yeah for a number of now. There's some of them that was not. I'll use my to poison example. My oldest son george in here in heat you shared with the. I'll give you my first experience with it. needs he. He was raised in the business. He worked in. It works wade through until they went off to college in it but he was interested in fishing gets his passion in his case. Was things that move fast snowmobiles motorbikes four wheelers dirt bikes. This is what he loved to do. Sounds like we'd get along pretty. Well do troy and the other hand off from the time. He was a little tiny kid. You could see the seat of he would be back in front of our h- house here a day and night catching frogs and just running up and down the bank catching he'd loved it from the time he was four or five years old internet. Never change he absolutely left. And i just think again. God created all slightly different with different interests and is a good thing. You had one boy in the garage tinker on motors and going faster and you had another guy you couldn't keep at the house. He was taking his fishing pole and he was to the water at four and five. Yeah in in in you and your the answer. Paracha half have respect know. I respect that. They have to be their own person in in in seek out for thinks the all that you know that those different interest levels impacted their right as they were growing up in reading some cases to to what they're doing today you know again my son toys into it in a lot of different areas of my oldest son and interestingly he he he liked even as a kid. You're living on the edge. He here you love the excitement of the snowmobile races today. He he'd get so pumped on yet in today. He's he's the paramedic he's a wilderness paramedic in he's fighting fires -fornia loves the game. You're whites. He likes ribbon on the edge to me. I like living on the salary to belated contentment. That's what i really like. And you know. I follow troy on social media and that that guy is always out doing something. And he's. he's an incredible fisherman. I mean it's it's yet it just anything anywhere any way any loves digging around in offbeat places for a coupla. He's got he's got pack whereas in no matter where he goes scurrying rats. He sees the body of water anywhere. Anything they could hold the fish he just drives up insider road. And rodney goes spacious anywhere anywhere crapping around the country with him because spent he's spent some time out west and i know he's fish some areas where i've been and it's just kinda cool to see that and i do want to ask you a question about that. Everybody has some of those favorite moments. What it was like a favorite moment for you fishing with your kids that you can recall the years ago with troy. I'll give you a. I'll give you my my oldest son that never got turned onto it and here's winter. Mistakes that make made with the there was a series the best tournament series. Starting in minnesota zillion years ago it was called the northstar bash turned into and when he was about four years old. I took an pre fishing. Mary and i got a cabin on the lake. And i took him pre fishing for that tournament with me and he had snoopy rag. You had snoopy rag. And they had to wait spinner baits. Then you know it was cool. We're up in the morning out. Who day thinking around. He's dragging this spinner baits through the water. And you know. I'm trying to catch some fish. Internet little said something. It's something from we'll get more moves out to have been great you you you hold in iraq ruled colin. He looks at me. it looks at the rad. He throws looked at me again. I got the message. You burn me out so bad. And so i think there's a balance there were so you know. My dad took me steelhead fishing. And i've i've got quite a few steelhead to my name. And if anybody out there knows steelhead there they can be finicky and tricky fish to catch i. I mean the passion for catching them is kinda gone. I've i've i've been out steelhead fishing and i've seen this in the hunting industry where you know you get some guys. That are pretty. Some prowess in are pretty successful. They take their sixteen seventeen year. Old son out. He shoots a world calibre elk and ten years later. He's he's not in elk cutting he's into fishing or snowmobiling or something else does. Ruggles images of the other side of that story would try. What are the experiences a for a number of years we as a family. A number of where we fished in tournaments in canada Rainy lake in minnesota canadian border. Another one at nor tap happened awake to work and we fish team tournaments up there and over the years that we hit fished at is a group together ranch fish with one of his sons. Jimmy and billy clubs voice fish fish together with danny. We're troy and We look forward to these these tournaments every year of up there and we won a number of them in your jimmy and in billy one. Two of back in those weeks the week caprice fishing leading into that terminated. That was the week muster sunday for fifteen years. Yeah you know it was the highlights of of our trip together with all of us as a family together and each one bus us. Everyone about when i talk to the boys inclusive of troy. Now he says that was some of the most enjoyable experiences we ever had and all of us at weren't time and other did really good way. And i did a couple of seconds and thirds internet but did win one with him in california and in went ahead and opportunity. You get fish with you. Those times that we're in those events burn memories that they talk about still in. Those chips are really important with father and a son. I know with my dad. We had an annual trip that we would take to flaming gorge and that always meant the world to me because we'd spend five or six days out on the gorge just fishing and not worrying about all the other stuff you know. The work stresses of life. And you know i had told you in an email about a trip to voice in just those kind of trips. Just make a huge difference in a young english life and death makes it something that makes them wanna come back later ended it burns into your sweet. You get so excited and then you think about it so often you think you keep revisiting that your mind. Our great great great experience. Yep absolutely and i wanted to touch on something else because we do try to help you know young new people into get into fishing and whatnot. And what are some tips that you give people when they're going to a brand new fishery and they've never been there before. What do you tell him to look for. And what are some tips that you give them. You know it's gotten a lot easier these days because of social media into local bites really. I mean you're you're you're deficient research on lake levels in what the bites been like recently. Water clarity stabilized. Image is endless. In comparison to what we had sixty years ago running through the changes that i've seen are gathering in the business of what the liberal. But you could do so much preliminary work you know. Get getting on your computer Checking out google earth. Going to local site Hunting down to let local reports. That give you an idea of what the bite is like what they're biting that. Yeah you know. Even to death preferences that stuff today is is in most cases. These areas have a very dependable week. Al outlet and that retail outlet Is a great source of information. They don't hide stuff from people they want you to have a good experience and they have fishing reports. That are done weekly. yeah you know. There's things that are posted a soon as their retail operation. So they give you the most up to date information you can possibly get and the is saves you so much time by doing a little bit of homework. So i'll you've got fish a lot of places in your lifetime. What was one of your favorite destinations. One place you wanna go go back in two at this point so far i probably one of the greatest place that i would go go bad bad and it was a family of them. Refer went to australia and We fishburne windy and we floated the rivers my wife stay. She didn't go coin with us into the jungle. And we did it three days when but ahead my two boys and We floated the river. spur morning. And we can't detonate banks and stuff and it was going through the you'd see what originally state you with. All these people would come to the river and you see these salt water again. Getting you know we're we're presented teasing experience. We we fish adequate the very typical coins When with the river for and wendy was that the guy that we're with you at a massive john bolt in. And i think if i remember would the sixty four or more on knew we weren't we took Took off at a tipping point when we went out. I don't know how many miles thirty miles or so it was in between darren new canning two oceans. Boil them your. I've never seen so many fish in my life and we got stuck his thing. We had backup quit. I don't even know we've -able experience that in there then we fish. Gt's the great barrier reef. Yeah you know a couple of days we did that tap water fishing critique keys but that was the the most probably the most memorable trip send in the boys rules enough to to remember that and enjoy and i've never been back again but never been back after us really get to do that. Sounds like a lot of fun to me It was exciting. It was really exciting. Every day was true adventure. Oh man that's one awesome thing about fishing is you know whether you're going out your back porch to your little pond or no for for me it was. We went to alaska couple times in my teenage years. Dad took us up to prince of wales island. And those you can either go on a short little ten minute trip around around the corner and fish a canal right by your house or you can go. Halfway across the globe know go to australia does. The opportunities are endless and every one of them is special in. Its own way you know in every fish. Especially it's it's all the way to work with some incredibly you state. Anglers jimmy jeremy hardcore muskie. They looked. I mean this is their fish of yeah this twelve months a year. They're they're on sites. They're always thought worst. What's what's next year. Where their plan. And what is your shoots in that. But every one of us might might bishop choices of small outbreaks. And then i'll go to a wall in allege mouth after that and i enjoy muskie fishing but not like these guys do either yet. It's their deal. And we got guys crappie fish at that looked crappie fishing nets. i'm kinda more kind of favor with troy. I like a little of everything in every case everybody in office sometimes throughout the year goes and jerks and goes a car. What would we are. We'll get a car. Pike in warning to every two to get to tax at least yet you know something different something out of the ordinary it go get some carbon in you know it. It pulled the fun to catch challenging at times. There's a lot of different ways to get him the. It's something i would not want to do every day. Like the mix it up. I like to catch your letter. What types of things. I can't do when thing. I liked the variety but i mean They're so fascinating fish. And i still in our country today in the states. Stay they you know in your up in different places the world there yet. They're big deal especially european nations. You so that's the money. It's like our best here in drives the market. And then he many cases sh- something silly in some off beatles little place in the and trial go round when i visited him. He'll take me shore fishing spots underfunded we mainly corporation jumping. You see him in the afternoon. We'll go think around for two hours or hours a year some place. He'd learned that when he was in arizona for years he went to college. There learned all the inner city rex. He didn't have the both twitter. Invent until i took down with a boat. All during breaks and classes he found every single nook and cranny at fish in and around the entire phoenix area. And believe me. There was a lot of those a lot of little pans and stuff and in and it was you. Carpeting had more more at your standard run carpet. It hit they all had best large mouth bass in your blue gill winner catfish so we just think around shore fishing nets or his wealth of bank fishing for years. He went to school there. All he did was bank fish off it back and it was just fun. I would love to do with you. Know i got the greatest in late. Greatest poison the war world my london. I'm rigged out with everything you can imagine the boat you know. The latest technology and everything enters a full ride at times. It just a whole lot of fun. It go beat a path pine fish for sure. Get some louis. This episode of rag cast outdoors is brought to you in part by. Pk lures pk. Lures make some of the best fishing lures on the market. They're high quality lures shine when others don't by helping you put fish in the boat or on the ice consistently i've been using keilor's successfully now for over twelve years and i can personally attest to their effectiveness. When is fishing. You can bet that. I have a pk. Red dot glow digging spoon or a fire tiger going spoon tied on one of my rods. They've helped me catch many high quality fish of various species from season to season my favorite hard water lures. Pk spoon pk. Flutter fish in tungsten predator for open water. i love the. Pk spinach ig pk. Dakota disk and the next generation. pk ridge line. Crank bait this past season. I was introduced to the pk. Warbler which is also a really effective fish-catching machine from the boat. They also have some incredible video on their website. Pk lewer dot com to show you exactly how to use these wonderful lures. So if you wanna have a little more success out on the water and you want to help support the company please go to pk. Keilor dot com again. That's pk lure dot com and get your pk lures today and please tell them that. The rag cast outdoors. Podcast sent you. So i was gonna ask you. I've always wondered this. And i'm sure you've talked about it before but you know everybody's got their favorite method of catching a fish catch fish in any type of method. Any any species. I know you love the small mouse. I love the small mouse as well but if you could catch efficient any type of presentation what's your favorite. Revered you're absolutely no question. Whoever i remember watching you on the wall i video and a bass video just catching tons and tons of fish on those jigs. I had a feeling it might be jagd merick rigor and well like smaller. My mouth says big big pig. Pike some version of chicken for must be done gun with tubes. Big rubber bates. It's it's a jig gonna jk. There's a better way for all kinds of fish all the time anywhere. Get a one sti- family of bates natural leaders acted under the heading up a chick but she was a piece of red or some kind would addressing the guy if might wait if may wait. Four ounces for watering might be a one sixty four for crappie a purple mylar. Jig will work pretty good for steelhead. But i i'm preferential to to top water. Dry fly stuff. I like to see that fish commit. Come out of the water. That's just i. I did enough. You know wet. Fly fishing. That i patrick knows. We've gone on some high mountain lakes. And i just. I really liked to fool that fish to come up all the way out of the water. He's any kind of fishing for musky. Your small mop mop secure rare occasions. Pike tap water breaks. Those are fun if you wanna be consistent year round. Yeah you gotta you gotta get beneath the surface of the water. Yeah my biggest hike. Was i had a fifty three inch. Pike and this thing was was monstrous and it was lake. Naturally larry larry dahlberg and he was filming. But we're reading and got in fake cockney kakatua water are you talk about a memorable experience with that and You know where he's been everywhere to do everything. Yeah yeah you know. He's still thought at their daddy issues. Deck it was unbelievable scene and fifty three inch this. We figured it was mid thirty pounds. You know thirty five thirty eight pounds something again. Maybe it was. It was jackie gigantic for bike. That was half water. Fish birds played beat of ball. That would be. That would be a lot of fun. I now i'm like. Wow that sounds like a blast. But i wanted to change gears just a little bit One of the things that have admired you for years is that you're not afraid to talk about your faith and i think that that's very important thing and you know i want to see if he can share just a little bit about your spiritual journey and how god is played a big role in your life after the two most important parts of my life. The next year shared all all the time. It's fishing in my unity. Go hand in hand every day. Day is just part of my life. I integrated what we do with the television shows. You know the the impact that it it a try to kind of quickly for you until the time. I was thirty five years old. You know i was a person. It was not an atheist store. Nick knight that nasdaq. I probably would have favored more upper eighty s. And i don't believe anybody that spends any amount of time in the outdoors anywhere can be an atheist. I think that's an impossibility. But i had no really. I was obsessed. And i guess that's the only word i could use obsessed with fisher twenty four seven. That was all that and you know. It gets all in our businesses. Were building at that point in time and At thirty five started giving turkey in my heart to Right to spirit a guy who was just tugging in my heart. I met people that that Turned her life over to the lord. Lord that were hard party hard-drinking people that i knew a hard partier. You know when they were like a different person you night and day and he started to talk to me about about jesus guy stuff i never heard of before the enemy sound comes with a lot of people you gotta understand nothing really new number and then i started the search knowing there's life got you got your busse heart who's much of his life in in one day turned us away lord has given us percents and i says well i i can't do it myself i need help i need your direction. I'm just saying guidance. Any made a confession of faith. Like they're nice and his life and then for about two years you know i wandered around back. Studied the word guide. The bible began challenged thing to me to get through a through know little things like could this really be real. You know like so many people. It's this bible. Could this stuff really. But this this thing is is there a guide the foundation guiding coke. Jesus was the foundation. Is this thing that he really is is. He says he is to be comfortable recently. Said he did from beginning to end. Yeah you know. And i started looking at this stuff. You know one day it got out of my head arc. It was never less years. All i can say is if you truly search is real. He's there you care some words to be. It's a real experience. You know the the point he's got to get out of your head in it. You have become a part of my everyday life. I'm not ashamed for the dash. That's it openly. That's who lamb. And i can only share the experience that i hear. And how would i life. My family My outlook on business. Now look on life right back by relationship with my wife and the older. I get a clearer easier. It is for me out to be more appreciative of of my lord grayson so al. I've got a question. It's a immuno high positive this way in a as starting my own business in the outdoor industry and then walking in faith in how how has that affected you know business decisions and just in a living in the limelight and and outwardly expressing. Your faith is there. You know ever moments of doubt. I mean 'cause i in today's society and day and age is definitely not something that's widely accepted. Are you saying in here by some subject back. But what would you buy. S- i mean as far as just running a business and then walking in faith. I if you look at the marketing partners that i have every single one of a from boat motor rag reels lures lying a wreck. Chronics are the top right at the top of their field in their individual categories. Everyone of and we've been with them for many many many years. Some of them almost my entire career. And i've said in corporate boardrooms all over the country. Go going all over television space over television network and contract saying that we re mega conglomerate and never have. I had one of say anything about my confession of faith and that show it all. Most of them have said they appreciated it and go forward and one of the reasons for that is an and some of them are not people but they businesspeople and the bottom line. Is i self stuff for. That's what i still stuff on. I do my job or am i would absolutely. That's why they don't you know so it's it's a only one. Major major challenge would network. It was who was with a network and and jerry jones johnson. They want forgot about guy that that was the words that they came back came back and they said that it's interesting the way they did notification we played on this network for a number of years and this particular year correct when just the way it always hits in five weeks into the show and it was a wednesday afternoon when it got where got i got contacted by the president of networking. And he said it's gonna pull the show because you're religious stance on it. We don't believe it's we. We went network anymore. This was on a wednesday. We get i managed. They did this going to pull it if we did we. Did we read it. Every i reiterate that we think energy i get contract signed with a bunch of sponsors and i had to deliver the numbers in so we get at that show and euronet weekend in the entire re edited version. And we continue our attorneys. Said you know you've been with. They want to take the court. You can't beat it you got. You ran for five weeks already. You did this for years. They never get it. They can't do for this thing and and they talked iran in in my wife. Laura his wife's no we'll go to thorough. They don't want you. i don't i don't want to be there. they want. They want us to be pulled what they want. They wanted to be this what we did back to show to them. We make the changes in our last of the contract for the television season. We sent them with bill. They said the bill hearing on pitching to us and we sent them the bill. Bill them back or the editing changes. We have to make sent it back. I never heard from them. That i didn't pay for the network in europe. Charge them back for all of the pain and misery went back bent. So it's no legal. Nobody called us back. Matt a single thing the legal. Nobody their legal. Nobody never heard from him since well. I'm really glad that you guys you know you. Un ron have have always been good about you. Know talking to people about your faith and it's been a centerpiece of the show and one of the parts of the show. The actually look forward to a bunch is the very end when you go through whatever god lays on your heart and i really just want to say. Thank you for doing that because we need to be able to talk about these things and i. It seems like culture is trying to move in a direction where they don't want you to talk about stuff that might offend somebody. But it's like you know these are things that we should all be talking about. You know if that's part of your life that's an integral piece. You should be able to talk about it. And there's one one thought i have on that. Patrick is to speak to have speech to have thought. You risk being offensive. Right to someone. And i mean if we're just gonna walk around muzzled and mass and never have a conversation about anything i mean. I'm into big game hunting that that can be offensive. Catching fish can be offensive. So we have to push back. We have to go. They'll run over here if you don't get you know and i'm a big thing an immediate business all my life. I'm a big believer a freedom of expression freedom of speech. Even if i don't with it so am i even. If i don't agree with it you still have a right to share. I understand and i respect it. And i think that's something that people need to remember. Is that just because somebody says something. You don't like doesn't mean you have to agree with them. You can just choose not to listen to that person anymore. I mean there's there's stuff that's put out all all the time that i don't listen to and i don't want to be associated with because i don't agree with what their stance is and you know there's plenty of stuff that i do love to watch and listen to that. I do agree with people that disagree whether you should catch fish on spawning beds are not right in an argument about that or you can easily selena when you can easily get there. But but again. I i like i said i. I respect our our freedom speeches. An expression is an important thing. I've been in the media business my life all my life and in people have a right this year that i have i a right. The like to tune into a cheddar offer. Do whatever i want with it not read it. I can exercise my own decisions. I'm not gonna go in there in equality sponsors sponsor them. Because you're doing this dead. I never do. And i think that's something that needs to be heard and i'm glad that somebody i'm sure a few people here it on this podcast but what you said is very true. We don't need you know this. Cancel culture of of things that you know. Ripples need to be able to share and people need to be adults about it and mature enough to handle it and choose what they want to listen to what they don't. I mean that's it's it's really part of the backbone of what what our country was supposed to be about and Were anyway i do to change gears. Just a little A guy that's been really influential in my life on fishing is pat o'grady. I met pat. Oh man that's probably been twelve thirteen years ago. And he was getting his company started. And i jumped in and helped him out with. Pk lures and here. He had told stories about you coming out to wyoming and doing some fishing. I remember reading. In the law. ally wisdom books About seminole and a few things. So i just wondered if you could share a little bit about coming out to wyoming. Western space are so different than northern or ride scary. Yo it's a whole different world and you mentioned to you mentioned alluded earlier when they get used to is. Never any wind ever ending win in. I mean if you go if you're going to fish you better better get used to win. Better not bothering you. The rick the vote right the handle nbc and being a safe piece the piece of equipment. They handle wind in it. I don't know if you guys ever go through three straight days in a row word you calm day never. I don't think lever happen. I go to archery shoots. And i have people say well. I'm not shooting in the wind and they start playing. Oh the winds blow. And i said well you come to wyoming. If you don't shoot or hunt in the wind just don't go hunting joke. Defeat w. t where we go to the code is as an example. You look at the weather report the night before they they say the win the window. We from fifteen to twenty five. It means it's going to be forty plus asu. It'd be forty dollars. Plus that's what you're going to get the truth. Well you talk about seminar. That is one of the windiest places. I think in the lower forty eight. I mean the the wind speeds on that reservoir are ridiculous. But i'll tell you the fishing is phenomenal. How many winter they put around it. Yeah they put a lot of wind turbines that sucker for good reasons but those western reservoirs growth big fish. Hey we're trying to keep that a secret. Al off carp fish is amazing and even some very. I'm a small mountain. i love smart fishing. The small mouth world small mouth. Fishing is as popular as it's become the tournament organizations. That have the come up north and since two small fishing and a great lakes and now they're coming everywhere yet yet you know you get to experience it in tournaments Love it the small mouth. Fishery that exists. West of the mississippi river is still some of the most unexplored smart fishing in north america systems. I can't you're innocent. At west of the river or to western states many of those reservoirs got phenomenal phenomenal. Nominal bishop i. I liked to tell the story. I've told a couple of times there's a. there's a river in oregon. I won't give the name but an all out to you. We drift boat floated at one day. And i hooked sixty small mouth in a day and i got tired of jagan forum. So i put on a mouse pattern. I tied and i caught. You know half a dozen small. He's on a mouse pattern. Just throw it right against the bank and start stripping out and they'd at that river this drift boat only so motorboats in that that can be a lot of fun i mean those are their sparkling out there and some of the some of the bigger systems pick the missouri river as an example for four. You've got set at saf. You've gotta wacky a. These are massive bodies of water massive massive systems and their in in in in there. I mean the small muppet. Nobody hears coast that they won't see an angler in your role year for small. Nobody'll be their four. Pack four pack is one of the most remote fisheries. I've ever been to. And i'll tell you what they're there have got to be miles and miles of shoreline that never get fished and i mean there's massive massive in their own up in way up at that even at the dry air dry air too short that is about what forty i think. That's forty miles long. And then you've got that main arms like one hundred and sixty miles long. There's very few accesses. Oh yeah you know you're right. I remember we had a pw heat from the tournament. They're in what we we got the attention that anisimov parsons weighed in. It was kabaya. They rent way when came to brought the smart in with his bad fish. So we could wait and it was like a six three or six or this. Was that smaller. That miniature scale in your macro swarm are up in san francisco. I couldn't pull about about have to lead. Somebody's somebody structures. Just drive in his crazy ton of them in there. That's an incredible says. I said there there miles up. It is the most untouched massive untouched mama. Fishing attack. the guy goes through not to mention some of the. There's one night and forget. That warned that they bleed. I think they believe their next record. Birsh sure commander there. I can't remember to saturday with no gather some wells. Old anti yeah. There's some fantastic fisheries out here. And i know just in wyoming alone. I mean you've got a number of really good reservoirs for walleye and you know a couple for small mouth that are really significant and a whole bunch that are good for trout of various species. And of course he got flaming gorge with those humongous lake trout. And that's and that's an incredible fishery to we touched on earlier smarter and they've they've kinda taken a dive the they they think that the Burbot that made their way there. Somehow somebody moved burbot down there into that drainage from apparently around this area and They just haven't they haven't done as well they they were doing really well in the early two thousands. I used to go down there with my dad and we'd catch some up to four four and a half pounds and now it's pretty hard to find them. They're still there. They're just not in the quantity that they used to be environmentally. Then yep There's something to be said for that. You know when i grew up steelhead fishing. You'd spend a lot of hours and when you finally hook into one of those thirty forty inch fish. I mean they they take you for a ride for a while but you can fish for two three four days before you even catch one hook one hook up you go small fishing and have those fisher so dang aggressive are fun. It's fun so that's one of the beauty of them. Yeah there's a there's a little reservoir here in wyoming that kicks out you around five pound fish. Pretty regularly And i i went there with a buddy of mine one time and we are fishing. Top water thing between josh. And i we we both got probably fish apiece just fishing little poppers on the surface in it was just a lot of fun and then that thing that you talked about al that happens in wyoming happened in the wind blowing really really hard to get off their old of the gun the boat for your life. Get your your jacket on. Got what. I'll tell you that much we got wet but so what's what's next. What's in the future. What's what's you know. What do you plan on. what's coming up. What are we. Should we be watching for and getting a little long into or the age also slowing down. A little bit i mean jimmy wego muskie fishing me for four hours. I ain't gonna go in our barrett fats or two pound rubber. Big thing can happen. You're only as old as you act. Al see you know strongest kid. My body doesn't want my five. You don't want to receive that. There are things that are wearing down a little think. That's wisdom speaking to abandon. No too so. I i have to pick pick and choose a little bit a little bit more but i still loved the game. I mean know as long as i can contribute that this sport in a positive way. I'm gonna do it. i'm not gonna. i'm not going to quit. I'm not gonna retire up. Going to crack back. And i mean by cutting that i wanna do more fun fishing on the shows. Jimmy jeremy that the staff and other people we work with. I'd like to see troy get a little more involved with this stuff. These guys you pick up the ball and run every night for long enough to fund fish a little bit more by that go do some things and places a lot of bodies of water that i'd like to play around a little bit now for two hundred and a lot of people don't understand that you know when you're going fishing for the weekend without a camera crew that that can be quite pleasurable when you're going filming for an episode that can be you know when you gotta redo takes a redo when you just wanna go explore to make it happen you gotta make. It's working people don't they. They sit in their living rooms and watch that and go. Oh well they were just they. Turn the camera on and went and had a fun time. There's a lot of hours behind the scenes when the cameras work was in. And then there's a year no it's addressing a lot of times a lacking half and on hot fight fetched but then when you dress the show after that. That's when you get the underwater cameras stuff out to fit. That fit the scene where the fisher coming in in to get the right drum shots environment. Those those all add to the editing and make it a little more exciting the music tracks that that go with it. you know. Music is so subtle in you know a lot of shows don't use music because you have to pay Their cost us thirty thousand dollars a year to use a music so yeah bachelor of music track because their royalties and alma my companies right in this is our very first go. My dad and i went she putting this last fall. We hired a cameraman and we took him. And i'm learning very quickly of the shortcomings of we didn't get you know. Be roll. Shot here and this extra shot here and you know getting that underwater shot or that overhead shot that you need in. It's you know it's really hard now to recreate and get those extra shots that we need to produce the film that i wanna purdue so make a real exciting piece you back. That'd be rollers goals man just putting the actual the actual easiest park. It is actually catching deficient getting their artist on films that easy. Then you've everything else is putting it together. It's all better than that anything. Sweetening the more things you have to compliment. Show the better. It becomes the up on where we're struggling. We're stretching it as as as as we can stay but it's fun man fun. It is a lifestyle worth living. Believe me i if you if you could do it. And you find a way to get your niche in their buck doing it your sizzle lifestyle business for a lot of people if you if money is your motivation and you want to get rich. Don't come fishing industry and here's a lifestyle some of us. I mean you could make a good comfortable but if money is silicon valley and they live in that world out there if you want to be able to go out and enjoy the great outdoors and have a comfortable lifestyle. Fishing industry in hunting industry. Got a better choice. you will never regret. it couldn't couldn't goodness it better myself. I have one more question and this is a really important question. Now because on this podcast we talk a lot about recipes and we talk about food. I'm sure you eat fish i. I'm positive that because it's so darn good but is your favorite fish species to eat. And how do you like it. Prepared real simple for me. I had a free nights ago again. It's just brought up perch beer batter perch sounds pretty good to me. A can of bean beam beam some some cream corn on the sidewalk outside with it. And it's like eating better than a lobster themselves as it gets it. Sounds like there's always it's yeah it sounds like you've into edwards family dinner because that's what we do in my house the fried walleye perch and crappie and some some spicy bangs man purchased it. It they are is still. You can celebrate thinking about my wife. Exciting as getting just guys came back from a leech lake and they were a good perch. Blatancy wentz arch for your prize. Bring them over man. Yeah well that's awesome. And again i just want to say thank you again for coming on the show. We're really grateful for you. You know not just the impact on our lives and whatnot. But just i know how busy you are. And i am grateful for you taking the time to spend with us today. I really really enjoyed the opportunity guys. Like i said If they can't be fishing the next thing to do is talk about fishing. What ten below tonight. I'm enjoying. I enjoyed our time here. Today and You know another rapper. During some that you might want to get. You might get some time. You're looking for another guess. she can. She did older jim. Your jeremy better outstanding and they noted you're ready to get the truck getting some real offbeat stuff. Those guys i jimmy and his muskie fishing jeremy those guys. I'm i'm really jealous. Because out. here you know we just don't have access to purebred muskie's it's just we don't have them so i watch those guys and i watch those shows. I just sit there. And i salivate and i cry a little bit because i really wish i could be there but man. It's your fun. Watch those guys catch them. Windfall muskie by turns out. I'm telling you they get like you know that it's happening. After two pearl they get in their fall formless derise turn glassy. You can't even talk to him out space. I can appreciate that. Patrick knows win. When fall. season rolls around. David gone. david all gone but al will. I'll tell you it or if if you make it out this way we'll put you on some fish instead of just talking about some fish arabic bro. I like it man. i'm in well. God bless you and You know be safe on your travels this year and i look forward to watch and more of the winter media so i appreciate it very pretty opportunities guys everybody habitation. Thanks a lot. So i think we should keep rolling for a minute. We'll wrap this show up and do you have to tell a story about al. I'm really glad he came on the show. In my first and only time that i've al was i cast in twenty eleven and i was working on my laptop and i was up in the las vegas convention center and i was sitting on the side. Which is a huge building enormous. I'm sitting out and kind of of the way trying to find a quiet place. I get wifi and do some work for pat gradient. Pk lure so. I'm working on it. And i see this guy. Come out the come off the stairs. I see that it's outlander. And i'm like oh man that's that's all inter i wanna go say. Hi and say thank you. And so i get up and start to head that way and i kid you not. It was like a stampede. The ground shook. You know the sky got dark. There's all these people just came from every direction and kind of cut me off and you know it was like okay. you know. These guys are more important than me. These our sponsors. You know these are guys that have a vested interest in talking to al. And so i'm like i'll just wait here for a minute. I'm sure clear out. It didn't clear out. The mass massive people just got bigger and bigger and bigger and then that mass move down to where all the booths were. And i was like well. There goes my chance. Shake his hand and say thanks But w quicker next time patrick. Yes but now. He's got to spend an hour talking with him and he's he's a wonderful guy and he's made an impact on my life that you i can only just tell you guys that it meant a lot to me today to be able to talk to him when i was younger. My mom passed away. When i was fourteen and after my mom passed away one of my things that it was kind of an outlet for me was fishing just to get away clear my head get away from life and my dad. I remember one saturday. He took me down to cabela's in sidney nebraska which is about a hundred miles from cheyenne. So he went to sydney. Bought some fishing gear but we also went and we found that they had a rack of in fishman. Vhs tapes and books and so we picked up those things and brought it home. And i mean. I was in those things. Like you wouldn't believe you know on those rough winners of shan that i keep talking about you know with the wind. Cystic crappie fishing. That was there. And i don't mean the fish you know we we would watch those videos. And we'd get amped up for that next trip to the gorge to catch small mouth or that trip that we had that next year where. We just clobbered the ele- perch walleye at poison. So you know those kind of things really mean a lot to me and just al and just the way is just how he has so much. Fun has so much joy around fishing. It's just so inspiring to me and so having him on was a big deal. You know for me today so it was great but i learned that and positively right. Vate faith and fishing is what he said. But you if if you're not having fun in this industry and he really did hit the nail on the head. Yes it's it's nice to be able to get to a point. You could make a living at it. But if you wanna make money go to silicone valley go go go create the next app or whatever the next thing is you make money and live that lifestyle but you know he touched on it. He's been in the industry for longer than about anybody and he still working i. It's it's crazy. He's seventy six years old and he's still going and just definitely an inspiration to a lotta people and one of the things. I wanted to pass along as if any of you wanna try to win a trip to go fishing with al. You can actually put in for that right now if you go to. England edged dot com. Which is there lindor media fishing page. So it's angling edge dot com. You can actually enter to win a trip to go with al which i highly recommend you at least in the show notes yet. So i'll have that there and then of course go check out their website. I mean they have so much information on so many different species of fish. It's kind of mind blowing because there's just tons of it and you can order. Dvd's and a number of other things but definitely support them. They're great family. Great group of people definitely take a kid or a new person with you fishing. Pick a go. Pick mali's yeah. It'll catch some mvm. Some of these dvd's are shown. Their youtube channel for over magazine cited in fact last night before doing this stuff. I showed the kids i said. Do you wanna see who are going to have on the podcast and the kids were like. Yeah i do. And so. I pulled up youtube and just played one of their one of their walleye videos. And they're like oh man that's really cool dad and they were all excited so definitely get people inspired. Get him out there. That's the whole goal. Patrick exactly so again. Thanks everybody for listening to this podcast. It doesn't happen without support of our listeners. And david and i definitely appreciate it. We do sorry you have to listen to me some days Or for that matter so as not all there but definitely go to our website. We have shown notes. We have a lot of different episodes on tons of topics. Bears elk in wall. Is you name it. We've got a little bit of everything. And then of course you can check us out on the social media. You want to support us. Computer read cast hat. Give a half ship it to you. They're pretty cool. A pretty sharp and of course. Go out and subscribe you. Know if you're on apple podcasts or spotify or any of those places that you gave your podcast subscribe to the podcast like podcast. Pleased definitely leave us a review. Tell your friends your friends. Yeah so anyway just wanted to say thank you again again. Check us out at red. Cast outdoors dot com.

Patrick Edwards David Merrill Al Lindner Fishing Walleye Fishing Muskie Fishing Bass Fishing Radcast Outdoors Outdoor Podcast Perch Fishing Troy Minnesota Fisherman Lindy Equipment Co Lender Media Al Lindor Sean Rad Jason Lucas Cheyenne Lindy Deco J Jadwin Seth Ewing Lindy Dako AL Wyoming
"ewing" Discussed on ESPN Chicago 1000 - WMVP

ESPN Chicago 1000 - WMVP

02:34 min | 3 years ago

"ewing" Discussed on ESPN Chicago 1000 - WMVP

"That is that I would rather have been at Tom Brady proved to me this year that it didn't matter if you had the second best quarterback in football when there's a generational talent out there. You just can't win and vote. Either you go and get your heart broken for 20 years like like Yup. Packers have done all these teams or or and just suck it up. It's like having Patrick Ewing when Jordan's in the game. And because the Bears are unable to figure out that generational talent with regards to intelligence. I think we missed on the next guy. I think the Patrick Mahomes is gonna be feeding people for 20 years. Chicken. That's it. That's an excellent point. And I think it goes this far. Aziz. You can to explain why the Bears as an organization. Truly believe in matinee because they think I'm not saying they're right. But Sylvie, check me if I'm wrong. They think they now have a guy that can help determine how smart the quarterback needs to be. He's the answer that they didn't have in the room before. In their opinion, the same guy who's neglected the run, Harper same guy who who can't call the place and has to pass it off to build laser. The same guy who wanted Nick Foles to come in and win the job right away. The same guy who didn't coach mic'd Robiskie and coach to his strengths. All of those things all of those things exist on that Maggie's record and it is still Obvious to anybody looking The Bears is an organization believe him to be smart enough to determine how smart the quarterback needs to be the next quarterback. He is right and he's going to be very, very active. There is one name. Okay, There's one name that we have not mentioned in weeks about this. About a possible free agent. We have talked about the Shawn Watson is many people point out. We have talked now about Matthew Stafford. We've even talked about Aaron Rodgers. But there is another free agent. In the prime of his career. And could you get this guy I will share that coming up next bottle. Insulin's on ESPN one Chicago's home for sports. Black and Abdullah column in Las Vegas, Gentlemen, How are you under water? No shame. Yeah. Good column, Will you repeat after me, please? One small step for man. One. The man one giant leap for mankind. One guard. Thank you. Did you miss something? I actually think the recording from the moon sounded better than that was better quality..

Bears Patrick Ewing Tom Brady Packers Patrick Mahomes Nick Foles Shawn Watson Aaron Rodgers Matthew Stafford Sylvie football Harper Jordan Robiskie Maggie ESPN Chicago Las Vegas Black Abdullah
Superpowering Teams with Ilkka Paananen

Invest Like the Best

08:07 min | 3 years ago

Superpowering Teams with Ilkka Paananen

"I've been so excited to do this with you for two reasons one. I've been spending so much time thinking about in in kobe. Playing video games with myself and my young son. I think a great way to begin. This conversation is with one of my favorite lines of yours. Which is that you want. Said i am the least powerful. Ceo in the world. I love this concept because it'll introduce the idea of culture teams and people that we're going to spend most of our time talking about which may send a little strange for a video game company. But i think it's amazing and critical. So what did you mean by this line. Why did you say that. What does it mean to super cells. Culture i thanks so much for having me better. I think some are behold point. The ball trays that the more decisions that the snake and i make the better in an ideal were like if i five no decisions then but would make me. I guess is far full. Co the whole idea about supercell on what is at the core of our culture is this idea is small and independent themes that equal cells and these independent gained things sacred inside supercell way to think about them think about smaller start ups bidding raider company. That's why we think about them. I'd love to go back before super cell. Because i think your career up until that point helped inform you in how to build supercell with less focus on command and control and more focused on decentralized trust and i think our lessons today will be applicable across creative pursuits and industries. Not just in gaming what were you doing. Prior to founding supercell and what lessons that you learned or were taught by your experience before this business. I need to go back to the year. Two thousand so. I will still a student at helsinki university of technology. I had a business major vote on my actually like in my early of my studies for some reason. My dream job was to become either a management consultant. Thouray investment banker simply. Because because everybody else in my cloth wanted to catch and so deny then at some point in my studies. I was really interested in about entrepreneurship. And i started to think. Well this would be really cool. You know trying to build your own sing with a group of great people. And then i just looked like super lucky. I happened to bump into this group of people who wanted to found a company and it had to big games company on earlier. Especially in my dna cheers. I had to be a massive game. Iran still played a little gains. And then these guys may creating afford to pay any salary on threes and there was nobody else will what's gonna applying to join them although us nevil gains and they needed somebody else to do everything else and i was probably the only applicant assay and then i got the job done. I didn't get any pay funny. Anything is these guys for that. Okay you gotta do all the sales for us than me to give you like a proper titles and the people would actually like to see you. I guess they didn't know what to call me seven. They decided to call me the ceo. And i think. I was twenty two years of age and absolutely no idea what i was doing at never had a proper job except on summer. Jobs are my parents. They probably never had a proper job. Because all i've done. I've been ceo gaming companies. But anyway that's how they're going to start it. I know i had no idea what we were doing. Learnt by ewing an end eventually managed to graduate some there in bethany. and so. that's how we're gonna start in the thousand so set up a games company on funnily enough Ballgames the time if you recall those days assistant feature phones but they're coming to markets mostly from manufacturers like nokia for example of course based here in finland and of course never snow app stores. Nothing like you would need to distribute this job based gangs through. Carriers was very different at that time. But that's how book started. He founded the company almost exactly at the finding the dot com bubble burst onto members financing available so we basically like financed it bites doing work for hire work and then on the side be developed our own. Ip and our own games. I think miller able cut deals with most of the european carriers in big some of the us based carriers and then a massive amount of these jobs based phone scam the market and actually make some money on the company started to grow and back in two thousand four. We sold our company to company each chocolate. Which will say followed. By game industry legend strip wilkinson funded by sequoia on inclined burke in on the joined forces to them and then over time. The company grew to like four hundred people so relatively sizable game. Developers confident. I would call that down. Nba in guessing entrepreneurship and management learned. Lots of lessons. What were the key lessons that you learn positive and negative all combine the time at both digital chocolate and your company that was acquired by digital chocolate. What were the things that it installed in you that you brought with you into super cell and what were some other things that you reacted to a reacted against when the about how supercell would run as a company that they could've kept and what i learned that all domestic. It's all about the people and digital chocolate. I was very lucky to berkeley luck. Such amazing people. I kinda fought at those times that we are going to like had the best strategy the best plans the best processes in place and digital chocolate and mostly because of my doing so sexy quite a sort of a structured and also when it comes to innovation so we had pros almost forever thing if you off me like okay. How digital chocolate. Think about new games development tenure like a slight dick flex sixty slides expense. Exactly things for and they had all kinds of prose essays fall like how do they green like games the almost full we are myself and mike on leadership team over. There had a crystal ball as he kind of knew the best declare. Send a cornerstone. Humorous won't and then they put together like all kinds of control mechanisms to make sure that the company x. develops products and gains the direction. But then all of the years. I realized that there are a lot of negatives above this type of way of thinking. Because isn't the great the best creative people in the world. They don't get the feeling of ownership and oftentimes the reality is but actually the people who are best. What is best for the game for players. Those people are actually people are building the game. It's bill leadership. The people like me. And all the years. I realized our job as leaders. They should enable people to do their work better. We'll try to control the spent so much time carring the best people in the world also digital trump anything about why on earth tried to control them by. Don't do trust them to do the best thing. One of the things that made me fully realize this at some point. I start to look back with. Okay let's look at the heat gains but our company has pulled out early sort of a coma nominate these gangs. One is that may have really amazing people and raised themes it'd behind the games but interestingly the other thing was that most of these gangs some had nothing to do with all of these fantastic pros instead had besides the usual story was just need into anything else for these guys do their sunbury their on during the corner of the office and they were just doing whatever they want to do. And there's some flying under radar so to speak and then the next thing you know. This amazing game comes out. And then i start seeing whoa that. These amazing games may come out because of me or together they come out despite the spiteful things

Helsinki University Of Technol Kobe Strip Wilkinson Ewing Bethany Iran Finland Sequoia Nokia Burke Miller NBA Berkeley United States Mike Coma
Down Time Doesn't Exist for Tommy Amaker

Bob Ryan & Jeff Goodman NBA Podcast

03:19 min | 3 years ago

Down Time Doesn't Exist for Tommy Amaker

"I mean, you're you're super involved now with the NBC and I love that Craig Robinson's done a phenomenal phenomenal job taking over being active. Like I feel like that organization was dormant for years and he's done a great job. And I know you you're involved in that you've been involved in some other things because otherwise your wife's going to I mean, like like there's no way if you're not doing something. What do you get going to be annoying her? Well, she know what first of all she's really busy and and everybody with with the zoom meetings and everything where you know, I mean one party email. She's another you know, we got the we have to find out what when I can walk in and out of the kitchen, you know, because she's there in that area. So we gotta get our schedules coordinated, but but you're right just you know, as far as the dog See, you know, the National Association of Basketball Coaches is our governing body, you know for all of our divisions all divisions of college basketball and we're very proud of the association and I'm I'm very proud to be on the board of directors of that. I've been on that now for for a while and and now that you mentioned Craig being on new executive director and he's doing as you said so well a tremendous job of like us and supporting us, you know, we have great leadership and you know take anything away from Jim Haney, you know, but Craig is jumping in now and Baton has been passed to him and and we're proud to be a part of it together and I want a few committees. Actually. I'm on I'm co-chair myself and Frank Martin from South Carolina. We co-chair the racial reconciliation committee, which is a very important job that was created after the George Floyd murder and I was asked to share that and I was wow, you know, it was really blown away that I was asked to do it and but we've taken initiatives, you know, we've been fighting for certain things with them. Organization to help you know us to you know, bring about change to make a difference, you know in our society and through basketball, you know, whether that's the elimination of trying to take on elimination of old SAT and ACT test standardized test, you know, we're doing things when we were heavily involved with other coaches as well with voter registration, you know, some different things that have come up, you know come down and I have been a part of you know, something as anchor coaches for another initiative. That was his his baby in his brainchild is called a John McLendon minority leadership under the name that you guys, you know know who and and Bob you probably you probably knew, you know, coach McLendon. I wish I did know I didn't yeah. Oh totally well aware of. Yes, just the legendary faith. And and so we're we're you know, we have that's a coach driven initiative. You know, we're all coaches. We have Patrick Ewing. We have Coach K. We have Dabo swinney's Nick Saban football basketball. What channel is the one he and I have kind of been the anchor coaches, but it's been he's driven. It has been his idea. And that's something that we're bringing about having minorities more minorities women and men wage being having exposure and access and opportunity on athletic campuses to become Future Leaders, you know, we've talked about how do we get more? You know black people African Americans minorities in leadership positions. Well, this is one of the ways that we can try to do that to help diversify athletic departments.

National Association Of Basket Basketball Tommy Amaker Harvard Ncaa Nabc Diversity Inclusion Race Craig Robinson Jim Haney George Floyd Craig NBC Frank Martin John Mclendon Baton Coach Mclendon South Carolina Coach K. Dabo Swinney Patrick Ewing Nick Saban BOB Football